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Beaster

 
Album Review: Beaster

  • Artist: Sugar
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: April 06, 1993
  • Total Time: 30:52
  • Type: Extended Play (EP), Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Sugar's Beaster is actually outtakes from their previous dynamite album, Copper Blue. It comes off as some kind of deranged, ugly sister of that sparking album, a yin to Copper's yang, a violent, angry, and seething wall of aggression with (this time) little concession to Bob Mould's pop prowess. Perhaps the most densely recorded, heavy trip the man has produced since Hüsker Dü's Metal Circus in 1983, Beaster is what you might get if Mould had been in the mood to construct a full album of songs like "Slick"'s insanity instead of "Helpless" and "Changes"'s monster hooks. Not that it doesn't still make for great listening once one gets used to the change in focus. "Feeling Better" could have made Copper, with its hooky base (more so than the others here), and the best song, "Titled," is ferocious, fast, furious, and a total knockout, the most aurally exciting post-Hüsker Dü track yet. Again, David Barbe and Malcolm Travis are such a superior rhythm section to Grant Hart and Greg Norton, Sugar is a better update rather than nostalgic reinvention, and bits of Zen Arcade and Black Sheets of Rain aside, Mould has never come off so twisted and out of his gourd. "Come Around"'s "vocals" are all but demonic, and "Judas Cradle" matches metal pounding with MBV/Sonic Youth brutal tones slashing out of the guitars, which gives way to "JC Auto"'s meld of "The Act We Act"-style pounding into a thundering, insane, heavy chorus. When Bob starts seething "I'm your Jesus Christ, I know, I know, I know," you wonder what exactly inspired these straitjacket fits! Man, that's something. Now, there is one major flaw: all the songs need an editor, as with excessive length they approach overkill from too much repetition. Never mind. This is a pretty killer experience more than a record. Whereas Copper Blue made you want to sing along, Beaster makes you hide under the bed. Can't say they didn't warn you; Beaster is well-titled. ~ Jack Rabid, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Come Around Bob Mould Sugar (4:52)
Tilted (Lyrics) Bob Mould Sugar (4:08)
Judas Cradle Bob Mould Sugar (6:16)
JC Auto (Lyrics) Bob Mould Sugar (6:13)
Feeling Better (Lyrics) Bob Mould Sugar (6:22)
Walking Away (Lyrics) Bob Mould Sugar (3:01)

Credits

Kevin O'Neill (Art Direction), Bob Mould (Guitar), Bob Mould (Performer), Bob Mould (Keyboards), David Barbe (Bass), Howie Weinberg (Mastering), Malcolm Travis (Percussion), Malcolm Travis (Drums), Bob Mould (Engineer), Bob Mould (Vocals), Bob Mould (Art Direction), Lou Giordano (Engineer), Bob Mould (Producer), Sandra Lee Phipps (Photography), Tom Bender (Mixing), Lou Giordano (Producer), Bob Mould (Percussion)
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Wikipedia: Beaster
Top
Beaster
EP by Sugar
Released April 6, 1993
Recorded ?
Genre Rock
Length 30:51
Label Rykodisc
Producer Bob Mould, Lou Giordano
Professional reviews
Sugar chronology
Copper Blue
(1992)
Beaster
(1993)
File Under: Easy Listening
(1994)

Beaster was Sugar's 1993 EP. The songs were recorded at the same time as the band's acclaimed first album, Copper Blue, however, it has a much denser, heavier sound than that record. The EP is a loosely conceptual work built around dark religious imagery.

"JC Auto" is short for "Jesus Christ Autobiography." The Judas Cradle, also known as the Judas Chair, was a torture device allegedly used by the Spanish Inquisition.

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Come Around" – 4:52
  2. "Tilted" – 4:08
  3. "Judas Cradle" – 6:15
  4. "JC Auto" – 6:13
  5. "Feeling Better" – 6:22
  6. "Walking Away" – 3:00

Credits

All songs written by Bob Mould and published by Granary Music (BMI)
Administered by Bug Music
Copyright (C) 1993 Granary Music Bob Mould: Guitars, Vocals, Keyboards, Percussion
David Barbe: Bass
Malcolm Travis: Drums, Percussion Produced & engineered by Bob Mould and Lou Giordano
Recorded at The Outpost, Stoughton, MA
Mixed at Carriage House, Stamford, CT
Mix assistant: Tom Bender
Mastered by Howie Weinberg at Masterdisk, New York
Art direction: Bob Mould/Kevin O'Neill
Photography: Sandra-Lee Phipps & Russell Kaye Management: Bob Mould/Kevin O'Neill - Granary Music
Legal: Joseph L. Grier - Prior, Cashman, Sherman & Flynn
Booking: Frank Riley - Peninsula Artists (North America), Paul Roswell - The Agency (ROW)

Quotes

"I'm sure some people are going to perceive this as some sort of step backwards from the previous album. Some people will say it's self-indulgent. Almost anything short of community service usually is. People who have seen the band live will know this is not the case. This is the other side of Sugar that some people haven't seen yet, a style that we really enjoy. The presentation of the material is very demanding, very open to extrapolation, very fresh to us. You can make whatever you want out of it, that's what music is supposed to be about. Sometimes the experience of making music, or listening to music, shouldn't be overanalyzed and dissected. To me, that's what this piece of work is about." - Bob Mould[citation needed]

External links


 
 
Learn More
Beaster (1993 Album by Sugar)
Sugar (Rock Band, '90s)
Bob Mould (Rock Artist, '80s-2000s)

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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Beaster" Read more

 

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