Search - Anders Parker :: Wounded Astronaut

Wounded Astronaut
Anders Parker
Wounded Astronaut
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
Culled from the recording sessions of this singer/songwriter's well-received 2004 LP Tell It To the Dust, these half-dozen songs--at first glance--seem to serve more as an addendum to that album than as a new recording. Bu...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Anders Parker
Title: Wounded Astronaut
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Baryon Records
Release Date: 3/22/2005
Album Type: EP
Genres: Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 730876908222, 730876908222

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Culled from the recording sessions of this singer/songwriter's well-received 2004 LP Tell It To the Dust, these half-dozen songs--at first glance--seem to serve more as an addendum to that album than as a new recording. But it only takes seconds into the six-minute, high-volume blast of melodic fury that is the title track to make a pair of observations: it's evident why the Brooklyn native kept these selections away from the more calm and subdued Dust; and followers of Anders Parker's former bands Varnaline and Space Needle will find familiarity in Astronaut's jagged pace and vocal sincerity. A bevy of musical pals, including Jay Farrar, Richard Bucker and Joan Wasser (Those Bastard Souls), spark collaborative efforts on the psychedelic "Everyone Will Shine," the sweeping pop number "The Smile" and the crunchy-chorded "Fast and True." Then Parker reaches deep in his gut for the Cobain-esque "Come Off" ("Let's cure the evil that lurks within"), adding another line to his resume as one of music's vastly underappreciated artists. --Scott Holter
 

CD Reviews

I can't stop listening to it!
MDC | Campbell, CA USA | 07/08/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I had never heard of Anders Parker until I saw him perform live, all by himself, opening for Jay Farrar at the Great American Music Hall in San Francisco. Oddly enough, the only song of his I remembered wasn't actually his song...he did an absolutely beautiful rendition of the Beatles' Norwegian Wood, easily one of my favorite Beatles songs ever. I was so blown away by it that I immediately ordered The Wounded Astronaut EP such that it would arrive while I was out of the country. Once I returned, I popped it into my stereo and listened to it...and I thought it was pretty good. Then I listened to it again, and I loved it, and it's just snowballed from there. I'm never somebody to listen to anything over and over again, but I just cannot help it with this album...it's just infectious! In the past three days I've listened to it at least a dozen times, and here I am listening to it again.



It's hard to say exactly what makes it so good, but I find myself drawn to its energy. When the songs aren't enveloping me in another stunningly arranged bout of rock music, it's building tension. When the guitar licks break back in, especially after the quiet "Everyone Will Shine", it's downright cathartic. It's an album that never overstays its welcome...never lingers too much on one thing, never skips over something good too quickly. My greatest annoyance is that it's so short; I could listen to it for hours and hours, and in fact that's what I do anyway, despite its length. Anyway, this is a fantastic EP and people really owe it to themselves to give it a listen...or several."