Search - Royal Trux :: Cats & Dogs

Cats & Dogs
Royal Trux
Cats & Dogs
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
Since their early releases were so disjointedly frazzled that the phrase "better living through chemistry" suddenly sounded like a ruse, it was quite a surprise when Truxsters Jennifer Herrema and Neil Hagerty found their ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Royal Trux
Title: Cats & Dogs
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Drag City
Release Date: 8/24/2010
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 781484003229, 781484003229

Synopsis

Amazon.com
Since their early releases were so disjointedly frazzled that the phrase "better living through chemistry" suddenly sounded like a ruse, it was quite a surprise when Truxsters Jennifer Herrema and Neil Hagerty found their groove on this 1993 release. Yes, it's still shaky and slurred, but with distinct elements of Exile on Main Street-era Stones and unreconstructed biker rock thrown into the mix on tracks like "Skywood Greenback Mantra" and the hazily uplifting "Let's Get Lost." Hagerty's playing--an eye-opening fusion of Neil Young lope and Magic Band-derived jitters--is plenty bracing on its own, but when wedded to Herrema's dissipated, bluesy rasp, the effect is truly galvanizing. Keep on Truxin', indeed. --David Sprague
 

CD Reviews

One of the all-time best 90's records
E. MCCORD | NYC | 05/16/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"It shocks me that this band--and this album in particular--are not more well-known. "Cats and Dogs" is as beautiful, chaotic, and near-perfect from beginning to end as any record by Sonic Youth or Pavement. Yeah, I said it, and it's true too."
Obsolescent Americanism: Democracy Educated
Jeffrey Rubard | Beaverton, OR US | 02/28/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"*Cats and Dogs*, the first fully-composed record by Royal Trux, found them in fuller form than "fans" would have previously thought possible; and in this and subsequent works we have something like the postwar "utopia" the United States is fully capable of sustaining. The cast of characters is rich and partially non-human: Jimmy *avec* bad-looking hat is worth having around, as is the car (with the eagle on the hood) and a heuristic bruited of by the Trux in this "worsted" wool. Do you need harder realities than those dealt in by Hagerty and Herrema (the "fifth tenor")? No, no you don't, and the mere fact that their music has been produced at all (with Speedos, with casino backing, in a polling booth, with *that* history of lies) testifies to an enduring moment in a *habitus* which has been taken for careless at best and ugly at worst. If you've ever been to an off-base cafeteria or a mess you didn't know, you already know this material by heart, and perhaps even if... it's okay: there are only so many things that can be done with a couple of live bodies, after all. For people out of sorts."
...somebody with dead feet / shouldn't walk out on a limb...
E. MCCORD | 05/23/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"i bought all the RTX records at around the same time, and this one actually took awhile to grow on me, but in the end it's become my #1 favorite.the music is sparse, but tuneful - every instrument can be heard crystal-clear, unlike the later albums which are thickly produced (but they're great too). and it's soft, but hard. my faves are "Teeth", "The Spectre", "Let's Get Lost", "Turn of the Century" and "Skywood Greenback Mantra". but the whole thing is perfect from start to finish. "The Flag", "Up the Sleeve" and "Hot and Cold Skulls" kick major ass too.
these days i mostly just listen to various mix cds i've made of the band, but i can always put this album on and never get sick of it."