CD
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| CD - Remastered | $14.59 |
| Vinyl LP | $19.99 |
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Pavement's SLANTED AND ENCHANTED is the MURMUR of the '90s, a record whose clamorous guitars and hum-along hooks can provide the perfect fodder for late-night dorm-room conversations and suicide term-paper missions. Sure, the Stockton, California, quintet looked like refugees from the college soccer team, with their preppy clothes and clean cuts. But their 1992 full-length debut is the height of indie-rock -- that "underground" genre typified by its low recording costs, immediately catchy melodies, and postgrad poetry. Pavement effortlessly took the tastiest ingredients of every great guitar band to come before them (Sonic Youth, R.E.M., Dinosaur Jr., the Fall) to make music that could be blisteringly intense and sweetly gorgeous, often at the same time. Consider "Trigger Cut." When singer-guitarist Steve Malkmus nonchalantly dropped weird, dark lyrics like "lies and betrayal/fruit covered nails/electricity and lust," he tagged them to a tune so catchy the final product melted in your ears like a Valentine's Day confection. On songs like "In a Mouth a Desert," "Zurich Is Stained," and the instant classic "Summer Babe," Pavement's pop was as elegant as it was abrasive -- and, unlike many of their slacker peers, passionate too. A classic. Jon Dolan, Barnes & Noble