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Mood Elevator

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Download links and information about Mood Elevator by Jack Logan. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 47:51 minutes.

Artist: Jack Logan
Release date: 1996
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 17
Duration: 47:51
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Teach Me the Rules 3:31
2. Unscathed 1:38
3. Chinese Lorraine 2:15
4. When It All Comes Down 2:13
5. My New Town 3:39
6. Ladies and Gentlemen 2:49
7. Just Babies 2:00
8. Sky Won't Fall 2:55
9. No Offense 2:10
10. Another Life 2:12
11. Estranged 2:18
12. Neon Tombstone 2:34
13. What's Tickling You? 2:47
14. What Was Burned 2:47
15. Vintage Man 3:32
16. Suicide Doors 4:49
17. Bleed 3:42

Details

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Jack Logan's true debut album (1994's Bulk was a two-disc set of demos recorded over the course of a decade), 1996's Mood Elevator finds the swimming pool motor repairman/part-time comic book artist backed by a full band, the aptly-named Liquor Cabinet, led by long-time co-conspirator Kelly Keneipp. All of the songs this time are co-written, either with Keneipp or guitarist Dave Phillips, and Logan wisely limits himself to vocals. Bulk had shown that Logan really wasn't much of a melodicist or guitarist, but his vocal and lyrical gifts are outstanding, and they're actually sharper here than they had been on Bulk. Tunes like the opening "Teach Me the Rules" and the mysterious "Ladies and Gentlemen" are lyrically evocative and musically memorable, and the full-band arrangements make this a richer-sounding album than the sometimes too Spartan Bulk. Most impressively, Keneipp and the rest of Liquor Cabinet are able to keep the "friends hanging out and playing in the garage" vibe that made Bulk so refreshing. An unpretentious but deeply satisfying album, Mood Elevator sounds like a more relaxed Wilco or Guided By Voices with a good editor and a far better work ethic. It didn't get the press Bulk did, but, in the long run, it's a better album.