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Just like The Fambly Cat
 
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Just like The Fambly Cat

~ Grandaddy
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
Price: £9.48 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio CD (1 Jul 2006)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Commercial Marketing
  • ASIN: B000EU1LGS
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 41,064 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

1. What Happened
2. Jeez Louise
3. Summer It's Gone
4. Oxygen/Aux Send
5. Rear View Mirror
6. Animal World
7. Skateboarding Saves Me Twice
8. Where I'm Anymore
9. 50%
10. Guide Down Denied
11. Elevate Myself
12. Campershell Dreams
13. Disconnecty
14. This Is How It Always Starts

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

If ever there were a band built to fade away rather than burn out, Grandaddy were it. For all their many highs they nearly always sounded like the batteries were running low. Sumday, their last album proper, especially was the sound of a band bumbling towards a dusty horizon with a squiffy smile and a tranquilizer dart hanging from a main artery. So to meet a resurgent Grandaddy is not only surprising, it also verges on cruel--they already have one foot out of the door following their split earlier this year. This goodbye album, in the context of the band alone, is remarkable for its success rate, not to mention its pulse. It makes a pretty bold statement in the context of the wider world too.

It may not be directly comparable to their hermetically-sealed psychedelic masterpiece The Sophtware Slump, but it does draw brightly from all aspects of their existence and feels like it’s sticking right behind the pace-maker. It doesn’t slump once. "Jeez Louise" is old school Flaming Lips weird pop with the wind in their beards and the phaser guns out; "Summer.. It’s Gone" is a gorgeous weightless acoustic ditty; "Rear View Mirror" is a box of 70s rock riffs in space and "Skateboarding Saves Me Twice" sounds like a synthesised Belle & Sebastian backing track on laughing gas. As posthumous releases go it is a triumph and needn’t just rely on the charity of loyal completists.--James Berry



CD Description

'Just Like the Fambly Cat' is the posthumous album by Modesto's finest ever band, Grandaddy. Combining elements of bands such as ELO and Mercury Rev in a lo-fi fashion, this albumis a fine finish to a fantastic run of albums by the Californian indie heroes. Includes the single 'Elevate Myself'.

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13 Reviews
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 (7)
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 (5)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fitting swansong, 5 May 2006
By J. W. Bassett (Kent, England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
In January, after ten years, four albums and citing the reliable stand-by of 'irreconcilable differences', Grandaddy decided to call it a day. However, despite announcing their break-up, the band decided to record Just Like The Fambly Cat as their swansong. The result is an album that, due to its variety, is the perfect distillation of the Grandaddy experience - so much so that it could easily be a greatest hits package, were it not for the fact that all of the songs are new.

Beginning with a gentle piano refrain, Just Like The Fambly Cat opens with the same sadness and trepidation that one should expect for the final installment of Grandaddy's musical odyssey, but from thereon in the band run the gamut of their sound. So, while there's plenty of invention, many of the tracks pay homage to songs previously released by the band.

In fact, Jason Lytle and his band even retreat as far back as their relatively obscure, lo-fi debut, A Pretty Mess By This One Band, on Skateboarding Saves Me Twice, Jeez Louise is the perfect pop song with which the band made their name and easily the equal of A.M. 180 from their sublime full-length debut, Under The Western Freeway, and Elevate Myself too recalls the funky, fuzzed-out soundscapes of their full-length debut. Summer... It's Gone, meanwhile, is the forlorn cousin of their 1997 breakthrough single, Summer Here Kids. If that single marked Grandaddy's arrival, then Summer... It's Gone is, perhaps the perfect farewell.

Last year's Excerpts From The Diary Of Todd Zilla, with its emocore leanings, was an indication that band leader Jason Lytle was still prepared to try new things, and Just Like The Fambly Cat does occasionally push in new directions - witness the thrash punk of 50% and the operatic album closer, Shangri-La - but no matter what genre the band mould for themselves, the subject matter comes as little surprise. With their final album, Grandaddy finally pull themselves away from the technology dominated world that they lambasted on their seminal album, The Sophtware Slump. The Animal World, with its barking dogs and chirruping birds, marks the beginning of this journey towards a more organic place, while the dreamy Guide Down Denied is also concluded with the sound of a dog barking.

Lyrically, Lytle doesn't give much away, but the reflective Where I'm Anymore has him admit, "I don't know where I'm anymore", and the dominant refrain of the six-and-a-half minute drama of album closer This Is How It Always Starts - the beautiful and fitting Shangri-La outro goes unmentioned on the album's sleeve - is, "Oh shit, I can't let them see me like this".

Taken purely on its musical merits, Just Like The Fambly Cat is an album where astral synths fuse with acoustic guitars to form a distorted pop framework; where its creators, ambitious as ever, reach further than perhaps it is wise to. But, more than anything else, it's Grandaddy's final album and as such, was doomed to perfection from the start.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars RIP Grandaddy., 28 May 2006
By S. G. Warner "pictobug" (Elgin, Scotland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I've only listened to this two or three times since getting it but it's well on its way to being my favourite Grandaddy album. It's not as samey as Sumday (brilliant though Sumday is) and perhaps for the un-initiated, slightly more accessible than The Sophtware Slump (another classic) but it's absolutely un-mistakably Grandaddy, and for that I am truly grateful.
Basically if you like Grandaddy you'll love this, if you don't like Grandaddy, there's something wrong with you.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Americana..., 19 Feb 2007
One facet of Grandaddy's music is consistently overlooked by critics and reviewers: that this is profoundly *American* music; it is the truest expression and "sound" of a warm American Summertime afternoon since Pet Sounds, complete with lawn mowers, sprinklers spinning around, and crickets in the cool evening. Grandaddy owe more to The Band, Big Star, the Velvets, Dylan, Gram Parsons, and the 13th Floor Elevators than they do Radiohead, the Flaming Lips, and Mercury Rev.

And this, their final LP, is easily as good as anything in their back catalog, though, as everyone notes, it is more complex, more inaccessible, and generally harder to "get". They seem to have pulled out all the stops to be as sonically bold and challenging as possible, and it certainly pays off to the careful listener.

One of the few genuinely *important* bands of the last 25 years...

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars the last and another great work from Grandaddy
Once again, Jason Lytle makes a great compilation of songs, the emotion, the humor and the beauty stay in the inside of everysong of this great album from Grandaddy. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Miguel A. Quintana Parron

5.0 out of 5 stars What happened? A moronic public, that's what!
And so Grandaddy pass off into the sunset, beaten by apathy. Thankfully they aren't going with the tail between their legs. Read more
Published on 11 Dec 2006 by A. Provan

4.0 out of 5 stars Glass half full
I just love Grandaddy's sweeping, circling anthems. I'd happily let the best loop away for hours on end. Eight on Sophtware made it onto my iPod, and five from this collection. Read more
Published on 23 Oct 2006 by A. Smith

3.0 out of 5 stars Dave B
I have to admit to being a little disappointed with this album!
Grandaddy have been one of my long time favourite bands. Read more
Published on 29 Aug 2006 by C. A. Bartram

4.0 out of 5 stars goodbye and thanks
Grandaddy were not a flaming lips cover band. They were part of a musical trend that involved the lips & mercury rev. And they were just as good. Read more
Published on 28 Jul 2006 by superfurry badger

5.0 out of 5 stars Viva Las Flaming Lips
Now that Grandaddy is closing up shop, let's put them for once and for all in a box. A box that has two words written on it: "Flaming" and "Lips". Read more
Published on 2 Jun 2006 by Sip

5.0 out of 5 stars Bye Bye Daddies, Bye Bye ...
So it goes, but where its going, no one knows. Thanks for the music, Grandaddy, you live in our hearts. Read more
Published on 26 May 2006 by Coyote Skateboard Survivor - n...

4.0 out of 5 stars The Daddy !
Grandaddy exit on a high with this excellent album. Its not as good as the end of millenium high of the software slump but its close. Read more
Published on 25 May 2006 by Pd Baker

5.0 out of 5 stars A sad day for music
So here it is then. Grandaddys swansong. Without a doubt this is one group that deserved more acclaim for there work than they ever recieved. Read more
Published on 24 May 2006 by Gigs

5.0 out of 5 stars Going out on a high
I love these guys. I love their sense of fun. I love the lavish production and the "full" sound. I love the quirky bits - the unusual sounds which add a richness to the end... Read more
Published on 23 May 2006 by Mr. TG Crawshaw

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