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Sebadoh > Albums & Lyrics

Sebadoh  Photo


Bakesale Album
  1. Together or Alone
  2. Temptation Tide
  3. Dramamine
  4. Give Up
  5. Rebound
  6. Mystery Man
  7. Got It
  8. S. Soup
  9. Not a Friend
  10. Not Too Amused
  11. Dreams
  12. Skull
  13. License to Confuse
  14. Careful
Bubble and Scrape Album
  1. Flood
  2. Think (Let Tomorrow Bee)
  3. Bouquet for a Siren
  4. No Way Out
  5. Forced Love
  6. Sixteen
  7. Homemade
  8. Emma Get Wild
  9. Elixir Is Zog
  10. Sacred Attention
  11. Cliche
  12. Sister
  13. Happily Divided
  14. Fantastic Disaster
  15. Telecosmic Alchemy
  16. Soul and Fire
  17. Two Years Two Days
Freed Weed Album
  1. Yellow Submarine
  2. Wall of Doubt
  3. Crumbs
  4. Nest
  5. Narrow Stories
  6. Made Real
  7. Level Anything
  8. Soul Mate
  9. Bolder
  10. True Hardcore
  11. Stop the Wheel
  12. Moldy Bread
  13. Bridge Was You
  14. Punch in the Nose
  15. Jealous Evil
  16. Burning Out
  17. Little Man
  18. Brand New Love
  19. Waited Forever
  20. Slightest Suggestion
  21. I Believe in Fate
  22. Pound My Skinny Head
  23. Whitey Peach
  24. Take My Hand
  25. Broken
  26. Three Times a Day
  27. Gate to Hell
  28. Feeding Evil
  29. Sexual Confusion
  30. Perfect Power
  31. Mr. Genius Eyes
  32. Jealous of Jesus
  33. More Simple
  34. My Own Religion
  35. Ride the Darker Wave
  36. Subtle Holy Gift
  37. Temporary Dream
  38. New Worship
Harmacy Album
  1. Weed Against
  2. I Smell a Rat
  3. Open Ended
  4. Love to Fight
  5. Perfect Way
  6. Worst Thing
  7. Too Pure
  8. Hillbilly II
  9. Zone
  10. Mind Reader
  11. Sforzando!
  12. Willing to Wait
  13. Crystal Gypsy
  14. Beauty of the Ride
  15. Nothing Like You
  16. Ocean
  17. Prince-S
  18. On Fire
III Album
  1. As the World Dies, the Eyes of God Grow...
  2. No Different
  3. Spoiled
  4. Holy Picture
  5. Hassle
  6. God Told Me
  7. Renaissance Man
  8. Downmind
  9. Rockstar
  10. Supernatural Force
  11. Wonderful! Wonderful!
  12. Limb by Limb
  13. Smoke a Bowl
  14. Black Haired Girl
  15. Kath
  16. Perverted World
  17. Truly Great Thing
  18. Scars, Four Eyes
  19. Violet Execution
  20. Sickles and Hammers
  21. Total Peace
  22. The Freed Pig
Smash Your Head on the Punk Rock Album
  1. New Worship
  2. Brand New Love
  3. Mean Distance
  4. Pink Moon
  5. Mind Meld
  6. Notsur Dnuora Selcric
  7. Vampire
  8. Good Things
  9. Cecilia Chime in Melee
  10. Junk Bonds
  11. Crisis
The Sebadoh Album
  1. Drag Down
  2. Cuban
  3. Sorry
  4. Decide
  5. Colorblind
  6. Thrive
  7. So Long
  8. Love Is Stronger
  9. Flame
  10. Bird in the Hand
  11. Break Free
  12. Tree
  13. Nick of Time
  14. Weird
Lou Barlow has been rolling in the Sebadoh for over ten years. And at long last, he's getting somewhere.

"We always gave each other so much room before, that it almost felt like we were making solo records under a band name."

Lou is speaking in the reflective glow of contentment at completing The Sebadoh, Sebadoh album number seven. It is by some margin the most cohesive Sebadoh record - though the same could have been (and was) said about each of its three predecessors. What really distinguishes The Sebadoh is its solid core, Sebadoh's core used to be palpably liquid, as each album took stylistic lurches around its protagonists' contrasting, sometimes conflicting, artistic impulses. No more. Where once we heard three voices screaming at once, occasionally to the detriment of the whole, now they talk in harmony. It's no less thrilling, but a whole lot stronger...

Harmony can be an elusive quality. Certainly, it's something Sebadoh has been striving towards ever since its inception back in '86/'87, when Lou Barlow began recording songs with help from his friend Eric Gaffney. Then, Sebadoh was an outlet for frustrated expression: Lou was bassist with Dinosaur, a group with a perversely undemocratic internal structure. With Eric, Lou made two albums of primitively performed folk songs, Weed Forestin and The Freed Man, and released both on cassette (they would later be compiled for cd release as The Freed Weed).

In 1989 he was sacked from (the by-then renamed) Dinosaur Jr under peculiarly duplicitous circumstances. The third Sebadoh album, Sebadoh III (1991), kicked back from the dictatorial strictures of Lou's former group, comprised almost equally of songs written by himself, Gaffney and a new recruit, bassist Jason Loewenstein. Lou's songs were personal treatises, poignantly sung

and invariably heartbreaking in content. Eric's tended to be splenetic rants, while Jason's searched for an accommodating route between the two. This pattern was to be repeated on the band's next full-fledged album Bubble And Scrape (1993). Responding to the criticism that an entire record's worth of his songs would make for a far more inviting prospect, Lou suggested people should either deal with the polarity or else make a tape of their favorite Sebadoh songs. "We give our listeners a lot of credit," he said. "Our only concern is ourselves and the people who can take it." But by 1994's Bakesale the strains of squaring this eternally combustible menage a trois had taken their toll. Eric left, to be replaced by Bob Fay, whose penchant for oblique, fragmented instrumentals ensured Sebadoh never got too cuddly. After touring in support of Bakesale for a year, in November they retired to snowy Boston to make what would be the most controlled Sebadoh album thus far. But just as they did so, Lou experienced an unlikely kind of fame. "Natural One", a song he had written with his friend John Davis for their group the Folk Implosion, gained considerable popularity thanks to its appearance on the soundtrack to Larry Clark's notorious film Kids and substantial MTV rotation.

For the first time Lou felt under real pressure. The recording process was protracted and difficult. Sebadoh strived for harmony. Instead, they made Harmacy (1996). By now, Jason's and Lou's songs felt increasingly complementary, due no doubt to the former's confidence and the latter's new-found sense of calm at what can only be described as his gift.

"I feel like I've gone through musical puberty in the last year," he said on the eve of the album's release. "Rather than being this center of confusion maybe I'd rather be a center of inspiration".

Chaos was still to have her say, however. In 1997, Bob left Sebadoh. Jason met his replacement, Russ Pollard, at a club in Cincinnati; after one inaugural practice session, Lou and Jason agreed that they'd found The One. In addition to drumming, Russ also writes songs, and the first one he ever recorded in the studio appears on the new Sebadoh album. That "Break Free" fits seamlessly into the record's fulsome pulse without shifting its urgent yet assured dynamic is the most vivid testimony to the band's startling aura of self-sufficiency and trust. Lou's songs, such as the apocalyptic Spector-does-New-Wave anthem "Flame" or the bruised epiphany of "Love Is Stronger", smolder with pride, the work of a mature young man who increasingly has the answers to some of life's eternal questions. Jason's bullish declarations of intent, like "It's All You" and "Decide" are more joyously cathartic than ever before.

Above all, it's the unity of purpose embracing these 15 songs that captivates. As Lou Barlow sings in "Tree": "Together - shared and strong". How far can they take us this time? The same song provides the answer: "Forever is not that long - let's begin."

There's no hidden meaning in the title. The Sebadoh is the definite article: the definitive Sebadoh.

Alternatively, screw it: they just got a new drummer and rocked.

--Keith Cameron




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