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The Captain's Table

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Download links and information about The Captain's Table by Ham1. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 37:30 minutes.

Artist: Ham1
Release date: 2007
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 11
Duration: 37:30
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Clown-Shoed Feet 1:40
2. Hare Lipped Bust 2:28
3. Saluki 2:47
4. White Rat 4:04
5. Moonie 5:00
6. I Had a Good Idea, But It Passed My Mind 2:54
7. How Can You Watch T.V. With a Dead Person? 2:43
8. Methmouth 3:01
9. Hubcap Frisbees 4:30
10. Another Flipped Lid Part 2 2:58
11. The Captain's Table 5:25

Details

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Plenty of rock bands with the indie label in the 21st century — whether they want the label or not — seek to do something different with the standard guitar-bass-drums lineup, hoping to stand out amidst a lot of other bands also wanting to stand out. Such is the nature of music, perhaps. In any event, Ham1, whose members play cello, trombones, and more — along with "shouts," as the credit list reads — aim to make their own sweetly ragged mark with The Captain's Table, and the end result is just that — sweetly ragged rock & roll that's rushed, energetic, drawling, a little of this and a little of that. Chris Sugiuchi's trombone work features throughout the album as melodic counterpoint or addition to the core riffs, as can be heard on "Hare Lipped Bust," while Eric Harris' drums in particular sound like Dave Fridmann has come over to do some extra recording on the sly. It's not so much later Flaming Lips that Ham1 call to mind as much as earlier — or at least early-'90s — artists, a stew of sounds and approaches that includes Man or Astro-man?-style space garage twang ("Saluki") and gentle Velvet Underground-inspired chug ("I Had a Good Idea, But It Passed My Mind"). Lead singer Jim Willingham is a little generic in comparison to all this — an amiable enough speak-sing approach that shows he certainly knows his Pavement albums, among many others. Meanwhile, credit has to go to the band for one of the more memorable song titles around — "How Can You Watch T.V. with a Dead Person?"