Insect Trust Insect Trust

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CD - Special Edition / Special Packaging

  • Release Date: 08/05/2008
  • Original Release: 1968
  • Sales Rank: 68,569
  • Label: PHOENIX RECORDS
  • UPC: 5051125301218

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Insect Trust

1LISTENThe Skin Game 4:10
2LISTENMiss Fun City 5:07
3LISTENWorld War I Song 3:21
4LISTENSpecial Rider Blues 7:47
5LISTENFoggy River Bridge Fly 1:10
6LISTENBeen Here and Gone, So Soon 4:02
7LISTENDeclaration of Independence 2:31
8LISTENWalking on Nails 3:06
9LISTENBrighter Than Day 2:58
10LISTENMountain Song 2:57
11LISTENGoing Home 5:16

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Back in the '60s, most white blues fans trying to play the music took the approach of struggling to sound as serious and authentic as possible, and a big part of the charm of the Insect Trust's debut album is that, by accident or design, they went in an entirely different direction. While the Insect Trust were clearly and affectionately influenced by classic blues and folk, they were also eager to mess around with it, and Robert Palmer and Trevor Koehler's horns and woodwinds often throw this music into a loopy, atonal, and acid-infused direction while the loose, slightly rickety sound of Bill Barth and Luke Faust's guitars and banjos honors the styles found on vintage 78s just as their rock-oriented chops keep the results from sounding as if they spent much time actually learning the original riffs. Given the loose but insistent backporch funk of this music -- perhaps held in place by guest musicians Bernard Purdie, Hugh McCracken, and Chuck Rainey -- the sweet tone of Nancy Jeffries' vocals seems a bit out of place, but she never seems less than committed, and she gives "World War I Song" and "Declaration of Independence" a full-bodied reading that fits their meaning, if they don't sound especially "bluesy." And the final two cuts, "Mountain Song" and "Going Home," take off into a never-never land of pastoral avant-garde whimsy that exists in a world all its own. The Insect Trust refined their worldview on their second, last, and finest album, 1970's Hoboken Saturday Night, but their debut has more than its fair share of lovely moments and is an engaging example of roots music fans letting their freak flag fly with righteous joy. Mark Deming, All Music Guide

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