 |   |  |  |  | | White Pepper | | Item Specifics - Music: CDs | | | Artist: | Ween | | Release Date: | May 02, 2000 | | | Format: | CD | | Record Label: | Elektra Entertainment | | | Genre: | Rock | | UPC: | 075596244923 | | | Sub-Genre: | Alternative | | Album Type: | -- | | | | | Condition: | Used | | | |
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| Portions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2008 Muze Inc. All rights reserved.
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White Pepper is Ween's most accessible album to date, lacking
their trademark flights of fancy and exuberant bizarreness. By any
other standard, White Pepper is a weird, wild ride.
Let's face it -- no other band would even think of recording tracks as
diverse as the Brit-pop-styled "Even If You Don't," the Jimmy Buffett parody "Bananas and Blow," a slamming hardcore punk song named after a Burt Reynolds
flick ("Stroker Ace"), a tape-warped baroque instrumental called "Ice
Castles," and the psych-prog-tinged soft-rock epic "Back to Basom," let
alone sequencing all of them in a row. To neophytes, such whiplash
shifts in mood may seem alienating (or intriguing, depending on their
taste), but to any hardcore fan, it's not surprising and it might not
even seem as funny as before. But, if you're listening to Ween just to
chuckle, you're missing the point anyway, since they're not just
consummate satirists -- check out the wonderful "Pandy Fackler," which
mimics Steely Dan's lush jazz-pop, down to Gene's deadly Donald Fagen imitation -- they're consummate songwriters and musicians. Ween's music rewards multiple plays and White Pepper
is ample proof. It may not be bracing, nor is it gonzo, yet it's a
tight album filled with more pop gems than most bands can hope to
achieve in their career. If that seems like hyperbole, especially for a
duo that still indulges in silly dirty jokes, it's not. Yes, they may
push the boundaries of good taste, but the music is always convincing,
from the trippy "Exactly Where I'm At" and "Flutes of Chi" to the
minor-key country stomper "Falling Out" and reflective ballad "She's
Your Baby." If White Pepper isn't as crazy, funny, or sprawling as their previous albums, so be it -- it's more satisfying than most records.
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 |  |  | | Additional Information about White Pepper Portions of this page Copyright 1948 - 2008 Muze Inc. All rights reserved.
| Track listing | 1. Exactly Where I'm At 2. Flutes Of Chi 3. Even If You Don't 4. Bananas And Blow 5. Stroker Ace 6. Ice Castles 7. Back To Basom 8. Grobe, The 9. Pandy Fackler 10. Stay Forever 11. Falling Out 12. She's Your Baby
| | Details | | Producer: | Chris Shaw, Ween | | Distributor: | WEA (distro) | | Recording type: | Studio | | Recording mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
| | Album notes | Ween: Gene Ween, Dean Ween, Claude Coleman, Dave Dreiwitz, Glenn McClelland. Additional personnel: Stu Basore, Jane Scarpantoni, Chris Shaw, Russel Simins, Vaneese Thomas, Angela Clemons, Mark McDonald, Greg Frey, Pat Frey, Danny Madorsky. Recorded at Bearsville Studio & Turtle Creek Barn, Woodstock, New York. There are signs of increasing maturity on WHITE PEPPER, Ween's eighth studio album, though not enough to back the claim that Gene and Dean are actually going straight. More like they've achieved a sensible grasp on when to court the masses, and when to drop the Boognish gospel upon the faithful. A handful of tunes signify Ween's most explicit attempts yet to create genuine silly love songs that become radio hits, and get canonized by the straight world. "Even If You Don't" is a Bay City Rollers-type upfront pop-rock ditty, "Stay Forever" is a gorgeous soft-rock charmer full of the melodic and harmonic magic of ELO, while "Falling Out" is prime faux-Merseybeat fashioned from the Beatles' "Little Girl." That the sentiments in each of these songs are direct and decidedly non-toxic intimates that Gene and Dean have been spending more time in love, and less on the Scotchguard bongs. Then again, the metallic bluster of Dean's "Stroker Ace," the quasi-Caribbean shipwreck drug story "Bananas and Blow," and the Steely Dan-like tale of a floozy named "Pandy Fackler," show that they're still comfortable hanging out in the more mucus-infested corners of their imaginations.
| | Editorial reviews | Included in Magnet's 20 Best Albums of 2000 - ...A chugging contest in the musty wine cellar of popular song...guzzling these fine vinatges until they vomit... Magnet (01/01/2001)
4 stars out of 5 - ...The Pennsylvania dudes have ransacked all their usual obsessions--from absurd Celtic tomfoolery to prog rock pomposity--but have now added strings, horns and female backing singers... Uncut (08/01/2000)
3 stars out of 5 - ...A wildly inventive, often sprawling opus, comprising a multitude of styles from boisterous guitar rock to psychedelic nonsense... Q (07/01/2000)
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