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Down With Gravity

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Download links and information about Down With Gravity by Forever Einstein. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Rock, Progressive Rock genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 01:07:06 minutes.

Artist: Forever Einstein
Release date: 2000
Genre: Rock, Progressive Rock
Tracks: 10
Duration: 01:07:06
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Maybe Spending the Rest of Your Life in a Madhouse Will Teach You Some Manners 5:43
2. My Mule Wouldn't Walk in the Mud So I Had to Put 17 Bullets in Her 5:51
3. You Want Fries With That? 5:00
4. My wife's ex-husband's grandfather's bowler is now mine and I Never Wear It 7:04
5. Minimalism Is Not Incompatible With Density 2:54
6. With A Car Like That You Must Be Knee Deep In Whores 3:26
7. Tell the Little Man With the Big Head the Bank Is Closed! 3:00
8. A Fruit Pie Salesman With a Whoopee Cushion Living in Wichita 19:38
9. I'm Going to Cut the Soles Off My Shoes Sit in a Tree and Learn to Play the Flute 6:19
10. Better to Be Early Than Lift Your Leg 8:11

Details

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Upon hearing the first notes of Down With Gravity, the Forever Einstein fan will feel slightly destabilized by the wah-wah guitar and the funky groove. No worry. After 45 seconds things come back to normal. The trio of Chuck Vrtacek (guitar), Jack Vees (bass), and John Roulat (drums) accustomed the listener to a unique avant-surf-prog sound. Once more for this fourth album, Vrtacek throws guitar lines that would perfectly fit into a film noir or even a documentary on the Beach Boys heritage. But those lines also come with rhythmical complications and a very serious lack of seriousness. This time around, the surf/garage mood is treated with some Arabic flirts (on "You Want Fries With That?"). The writing is still full of surprises, sometimes downright complex, but the tunes are always delivered with ease and a somewhat mystifying debonair attitude (just listen to Jack Vees' basslines). Although the length of tracks keep on growing (there is a 20-minute tune, quite a stretch from the two-minutes-and-under numbers of the first two albums), this opus may be Einstein's most accessible release.

Finally, one of Forever Einstein's trademarks is the incredible song titles Vrtacek comes up with and this time, he has outdone himself. A few examples: "My mule wouldn't walk in the mud so I had to put 17 bullets in her," "With a car like that you must be knee deep in whores," and this piece of anthology, "A fruit pie salesman with a whoopee cushion living in Wichita Falls OR Wow! If your fly weren't open you'd look just like Roger Moore." Lively, without pretension, funny, perfect for the avant-prog fan's summer vacation at the beach. A nice addition to the band's discography. ~ François Couture, Rovi