Anodyne [Bonus Tracks] Uncle Tupelo

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CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks

  • Release Date: 03/11/2003
  • Original Release: 1993
  • Sales Rank: 18,099
  • Label: RHINO / WEA
  • UPC: 081227383220

Listener Rating: (2 ratings)

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Vinyl LP$24.99

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Anodyne [Bonus Tracks]

1LISTENSlate 3:24
2LISTENAcuff-Rose 2:35
3LISTENThe Long Cut 3:20
4LISTENGive Back the Key to My Heart 3:26
5LISTENChickamauga 3:42
6LISTENNew Madrid 3:32
7LISTENAnodyne 4:51
8LISTENWe've Been Had 3:27
9LISTENFifteen Keys 3:25
10LISTENHigh Water 4:14
11LISTENNo Sense in Lovin' 3:46
12LISTENSteal the Crumbs 3:43
13LISTENStay True previously unreleased / Bonus Track 3:29
14LISTENWherever previously unreleased / Bonus Track 3:48
15LISTENAre You Sure Hank Done It This Way? previously unreleased / Bonus Track 3:01
16LISTENTruck Drivin' Man Live / Bonus Track 2:13
17LISTENSuzy Q Live / Bonus Track 7:13

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Editorial Reviews

Originally released in 1993, Uncle Tupelo's Anodyne was both a beginning and end for these Americana pioneers. As the St. Louis–based band's major-label debut, the album was a consolidation of the roots and rock styles that had informed their music to date, and, seemingly, a blueprint for future energizing fusions of rock, country, and folk -- exemplified early on by the bristling rock guitar assault on "The Long Cut." Of course the album turned out to be Uncle Tupelo's final chapter -- co-leaders Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy would go on to form Son Volt and Wilco, respectively -- and now one can only marvel at what was and what might have been. "Chickamauga," a Farrar screed penned from the bottom of a broken heart and titled after the site of one of the Civil War's bloodiest battles, crushes everything in its path with a venomous, multi-guitar attack. The resigned title track views heartbreak from a somber perspective, its wailing guitars offset by the mournful pedal steel lines (courtesy Lloyd Maines) curling over, under, and through the melody. Doug Sahm lends his soulful voice and ebullient spirit to a ramshackle, Stones-ish rendition of his country weeper, "Give Back the Key to My Heart," in what amounts to a breather in the context of all the disillusionment expressed here. Among the five bonus tracks (two of which are live, including a seven-minute-plus workout on Dale Hawkins's evergreen "Suzy Q"), check out the gritty vocal Joe Ely lends to a hard-stomping rendition of Waylon Jennings's "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way." It's just right, like everything else here. David McGee, Barnes & Noble



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