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Too Loud for the Snowman
Sanford Arms
Too Loud for the Snowman
Genre: Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Sanford Arms
Title: Too Loud for the Snowman
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: The Orchard
Original Release Date: 1/1/2001
Re-Release Date: 8/21/2001
Genre: Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 803680132227
 

CD Reviews

Grew on me
12/17/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I had heard good things about Sanford Arms and decided to try them out (after I downloaded an MP3). This is definitely a "lazy album" as mentioned by one of the other reviewers. The truth is the first time I put this album in I was kind of turned off. It seemed a bit too slow and drawn out. but after listening to it a couple more times I started to appreciate it.
This album has a great relaxed feel to it. The songs are loaded with great sounds that keep me interested. Definitely not some cookie cutter sound that seems to be a trend these days. If you like Spyglass (on same label) and sounds like Belle and Sebastian, then try these guys. Well worth the money. And never grow out of punk as others might have."
Lazy Rock
Chip Midnight | Columbus, OH | 10/18/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Sanford Arms includes members of Seattle bands that never really became huge (Alcohol Funnycar, Best Kissers in the World, Hammerbox). This is a great lazy album, not in the sense of "Man, these guys didn't really put forth a strong effort." The lazy I'm thinking of is the "It's 8pm on a Friday night, the work week is over, I'm going to kick back in the recliner, throw on a sweatshirt and watch some network TV dramas until I drift off to sleep". Let's face it, we can't be young and punks for the rest of our lives -- there has to come a day when we grow up, start a family, get a corporate job, and start drinking coffee. It looks like the guys in Sanford Arms have already reached that place and decided that it's not that bad."Smolder" and "Let it Show" are my two favorites by the way."
No Depression, September-October, 2001
11/05/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

""Just a song at twilight before I go," Sanford Arms' Ben London sings on "Mercury." The midtempo song builds to its chorus as if running uphill, telling of the end of summer and a romance. London's voice strains at the dissolution and entropy of something that had seemed certain and real only a few months before but, like the weather, has chilled. Departures and reversals fill the lyrics on Too Loud for the Snowman. The cosmic cowboy that moves in waltz time on Sanford Arms' debut isn't so much a distant relative of Jimmie Dale Gilmore as a drinking buddy of Joe Pernice. Former Alcohol Funnycar leader London possesses a downy voice and a wounded delivery that convey early-morning reckonings and late-night comforts. The dozen songs are lushly crafted with idiosyncratic touches, playing as a remorse-laden song cycle with a clear-eyed observance that keeps the emotions in check. The lolling cadence and ghostly arrangements are built on Harris Thurmond's lonesome guitar, Jeff Wood's melodic bass, and Rob Dent's loopy drums. Rob Witmer's keys and accordion float through the soundscape, swelling to oceanic proportions and then ebbing back behind London's voice. Producer Tucker Martine (Modest Mouse, Bill Frisell) creates a simpatico environment for the compositions with just the right balance of space and compression to let them breathe while keeping them grounded. That's the perfect twilight for Sanford Arms to hitch hook-laden pop melodies to folk-country cadences.
-- NATE LIPPENS"