The Quarter After The Quarter After

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CD

  • Release Date: 07/12/2005
  • Sales Rank: 99,369
  • Label: BIRD SONG RECORDINGS
  • UPC: 795306710127
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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The Quarter After

1LISTENSo Far to Fall 3:42
2LISTENYour Side Is Mine 2:42
3LISTENAlways Returning 4:35
4LISTENA Parting 4:42
5LISTENToo Much to Think About 11:56
6LISTENKnow Me When I'm Gone 7:15
7LISTENMirror to You 4:07
8LISTENOne Trip Later 3:43
9LISTENTaken 9:16
10LISTENEverything Again 2:58

Editorial Reviews

Between them, singing brothers Dominic Campanella and Rob Campanella have been at least an adjunct member of just about every band in the axis between the Brian Jonestown Massacre, Beachwood Sparks and the Tyde. Unsurprisingly, the self-titled debut by their own band works that circa-'67 L.A. sound, with heavy echoes of the pre-David Axelrod the Electric Prunes, Buffalo Springfield, and various other half-forgotten exemplars of the sound, minimizing the country-rock inflections of Beachwood Sparks (only notable on the Neil Young-like "Mirror to You") or much of the slightly unhinged experimentalism of the the Brian Jonestown Massacre. For a little less than half of the album, the brothers, along with bassist David Koenig and drummer Nelson Bragg, do a pretty good pastiche of Sunset Strip psychedelia, kicking up a particularly lysergic head of steam on the self-explanatory "One Trip Later." The problem is that the other half of the album, nearly a full thirty minutes, consists of three endless acid-guitar jams that don't justify their overextended length; the most frustrating one is the nine-minute "Taken," which cooks up a good old-fashioned freight train momentum and then blows it on a flaccid and seemingly endless solo. At about four-and-a-half minutes, it would be the best song on the album, but at nine-minutes-and-16-seconds, it's a prime candidate for the forward skip button. With an editor and a bit more emphasis on Love than the Quicksilver Messenger Service, the Quarter After may really have something. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

One to Watchby Anonymous

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August 16, 2005: Never having heard of them, I saw them open for Brian Jonestown Massacre in Houston. I'm not big on harmonies but otherwise they sounded great. I'm not sure the better aspects are captured here. They sound a little confined in these clips. Certainly, fans of the Byrds should give it a listen.