Create account Log in

Honey Steel's Gold

[Edit]

Download links and information about Honey Steel's Gold by Ed Kuepper. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, World Music, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 01:14:36 minutes.

Artist: Ed Kuepper
Release date: 1995
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, World Music, Alternative
Tracks: 14
Duration: 01:14:36
Buy on iTunes $7.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. King of Vice 9:52
2. Everything I've Got Belongs to You 4:15
3. Friday's Blue Cheer / Libertines of Oxley 8:03
4. Honey Steel's Gold 5:22
5. The Way I Made You Feel 5:20
6. Not Too Soon 3:11
7. Closer (But Disguised) 4:15
8. Summerfield 3:41
9. Indian Reservation 3:09
10. Steamtrain 7:40
11. No Wonder Medley: No Wonder / Built for Comfort / Cypress Grove Blues 8:06
12. Milk Cow Blues 2:07
13. The Way I Made You Feel 2 5:20
14. Everything I've Got Belongs to You 2 4:15

Details

[Edit]

A mix of extended self-explorations (and sometimes eviscerations) and shorter numbers, Honey Steel's Gold is Kuepper in many ways at his most dramatic and expansive. At the same time, there's hints of the calmer waters that he would explore in later years on albums like Character Assassination, though here there's more overt electric bite and tension. The comparisons that have often been made between Kuepper and the Cure's Robert Smith make a certain sense here, but more on the way both have an ear for using their guitar playing as a combination of texture and core melody, bringing a variety of dramatic shades to the songs. The title track, with its opening reverb-heavy loop set against a separate Morricone-like guitar line and a steady, relentless rhythm, is a killer example of Kuepper's abilities. Of the two extended numbers, "King of Vice" is especially remarkable, a slow grower that Kuepper's vocals almost (intentionally) get lost in, the music balancing a trance-touched mantra — check the swirls of guitars as they rise and fall in the background mix — and sudden shifts and new explorations. Chris Abrahams' piano break in the latter half of the song in particular takes the cake. As for the shorter tracks, "Everything I've Got Belongs to You" is a stone-cold Kuepper classic, balancing heartfelt love with just blunt enough lust and admission of darker sides, all set to a majestic, rich arrangement that the Band would have been proud to call its own. Other winners include the snaky, inventive "The Way I Made You Feel" — the sudden descending chord alone is killer — and the concluding instrumental "Summerfield." Later CD versions of the album included tracks from the No Wonder EP as a bonus, including covers of the Kinks and Paul Revere and the Raiders.