Modest Mouse
Good News For People Who Love Bad News
Label ©  Sony
Release Year  2004
Length  53:26
Genre  Rock
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  M-0046
Bitrate  160 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Horn Intro  
       4:46  
      2.  
      The World At Large  
       3:30  
      3.  
      Float On  
       3:47  
      4.  
      Ocean Breathes Salty  
       0:15  
      5.  
      Dig Your Grave  
       3:56  
      6.  
      Bury Me With It  
       3:10  
      7.  
      Dance Hall  
       3:00  
      8.  
      Bukowski  
       4:18  
      9.  
      This Devil's Workday  
       2:21  
      10.  
      The View  
       4:11  
      11.  
      Satin In A Coffin  
       2:37  
      12.  
      Interlude (Milo)  
       0:59  
      13.  
      Blame It On The Tetons  
       6:29  
      14.  
      Black Cadillacs  
       2:54  
      15.  
      One Chance  
       3:08  
      16.  
      The Good Times Are Killing Me  
       4:05  
    Additional info: | top
      It's hard to pinpoint the exact moment Modest Mouse started sounding like a real band. For the longest time, singer-songwriter Isaac Brock seemed to exist solely to defy the established rules, forging forward on sheer momentum and ingenuity. Even Pavement looked relatively ordinary in comparison to the band's early releases like 1996's This Is A Long Drive For Someone With Nothing To Think About and 1997's The Lonesome Crowded West. But on Good News For People Who Love Bad News, the front man sounds like he's finally touching the earth, and the band--minus founding member and drummer Jeremiah Green--follows suit. A relaxed mood prevails, not so much in volume but in attitude. On the follow-up to the group's 2000 major label debut, The Moon & Antarctica, big sloppy melodies battle it out with brass on punky epics like "Float On" and "The Ocean Breathes Salty." The lyrics are simpler, the arrangements tamer, but the vitality remains. The prevailing mood is that Modest Mouse has pulled off something extraordinary here: a well-rounded, lovable record that doesn't sound anything like David Gray. --Aidin Vaziri
    Links/Resources | top