Search - Frank Black :: Cult of Ray

Cult of Ray
Frank Black
Cult of Ray
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

It's a truly strange trick to be a subtle song-stylist and a raging guitar hero at the same time, but no one would deny Frank Black his eccentricities. While Kim Deal graduated from the Pixies to help define the new breed ...  more »

     
   
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CD Details

All Artists: Frank Black
Title: Cult of Ray
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 1
Label: Sony
Original Release Date: 1/1/1996
Re-Release Date: 8/10/1999
Album Type: Original recording reissued
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style: Indie & Lo-Fi
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 074646592625

Synopsis

Amazon.com
It's a truly strange trick to be a subtle song-stylist and a raging guitar hero at the same time, but no one would deny Frank Black his eccentricities. While Kim Deal graduated from the Pixies to help define the new breed of radio pop called alternative with the Breeders, Black moved his former band's more radical notions from Boston to L.A., wined and refined them, and fashioned a sort of sunny left coast take on the Sonic Youth/Yo La Tengo brand of artsy New York guitar rock. Black's first two solo albums showed a wildly original writer and eclectic performer with a wide grasp of song forms and the distinctive voice to make them all his own. The Cult of Ray, Black's third album (a tribute to fellow extraterrestrial Ray Bradbury), presents a slimmer, more stylistically consistent set of crunch-chord slams with a punk theme, including "Dance War," and "Mosh, Don't Pass the Guy," "Jesus Was Right," and "Punk Rock City." The album's missing eclecticism is more than compensated by Lyle Workman, whose muscle-bound lead guitar work is the stuff of Lou Reed's legendary sideman, Robert Quine. It even turns a so-so track like "The Creature Crawling" into a thrillingly exotic slink. Reaching a climax on the title track--with its furious punk riffing, soaring prog rock solos, and vivid but opaque lyrics--Black's Cult founds a curiously fruitful settlement in the vast sonic tundra between Green Day and Captain Beefheart. --Roni Sarig

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CD Reviews

Maybe not quite as good as the first two but still great!
Jacqueline F. Roverud | Minneapolis, MN | 12/18/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Yes, I'll agree that this is not as good as FB's first 2 solo CDs, but it's still great music, and with those first two albums completes the trilogy of what Frank Black is to me."