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Asylum Street Spankers : Hot Lunch
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A beautiful, rocking, and rollicking unplugged beer-and-pot party populated with the most unpretentious, heartbreaking characters you're ever likely to meet.
Genre: Jazz: Traditional Jazz Combo
Release Date: 1999
Hot Lunch
Asylum Street Spankers
Record Label: Yellow Dog Records
  • Buy CD - $13.49
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Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Cakewalk 3:11 Album Only
2. I Don't Wanna 3:41 Album Only
3. Trippin' Over You 3:59 Album Only
4. U.F.O. Attack 2:35 Album Only
5. If I Were You 3:48 Album Only
6. Colonel Josh's B.B.Q. 3:12 Album Only
7. Hot Lunch 4:12 Album Only
8. Blue Prelude 5:23 Album Only
9. Smells Like Thirty-Something 3:03 Album Only
10. Fanny 2:39 Album Only
11. Island Angel 4:57 Album Only
12. A Smo-o-oth One 7:06 Album Only
13. Bijou 3:07 Album Only
14. Sad Bomber 4:04 Album Only
15. New Jazz Fiddle 2:39 Album Only
16. Asylum Street Blues 3:38 Album Only
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Album Notes

This, Asylum Street Spankers' sophomore recording, breezes in on acoustic guitar and ukulele strains and the words "Life ain't a cakewalk, it's a waltz/And they're playing my music out of time" - and it only gets better from there.

Indeed, the Asylum Street Spankers, a loose, unplugged collective of Austin, TX, pickers and bon vivants, seem to have little trouble, on Hot Lunch's 16 cuts, deftly blending virtuosic musicianship with seemingly effortless musical and lyrical wit.

The band flits between ragtime, country, old-style am radio pop tunes, swing, and country-blues with equal ease.

The Spankers - particularly on such puckish, narrative cuts as "Trippin' Over You," "Sad Bomber," and others - manage to walk the razor thin line between novelty and just plain fun-lovin' jamboree frolics.

It's this graceful self-awareness that separates Asylum Street Spankers from such less graceful musical revivalists as the Squirrel Nut Zippers.

In fact, on the cut "Smells Like Thirty-Something," the Spankers seem to, well, spank the mid-'90s swing revival craze on its rump, chiding, atop a rollicking, bluesy riff, "I like martinis/and I like cigars/But I hate martini and cigar bars." Somewhere between that sense of humor and vocalist/instrumentalist (for every Spanker is a multi-instrumentalist) Christina Marrs' sublime vocals lies the charm of Asylum Street Spankers as expressed in these grooves. ( - Chris Handyside, AllMusic Guide)

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REVIEWS

hot lunch
author: michael blackburn
                            
A religious experience, if you believe in that sort of thing.
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a disc that holds its liquor well
author:
                            
Celebrating the joys of drug abuse, the Asylum Street Spankers have put together a disc that holds its liquor well. In spite of initially appearing to be a one-joke record; song after song the joke never wears thin. The Spankers use the focus on drugs to explore the wide significance in our culture of drugs and their use--from the celebration of beer ("Beer," worthy of the Drew Carey show) to a scathing critique of America's war on drugs ("Winning the War on Drugs," more sophisticated than any drug discussion on "Meet the Press"). As for the music, it careens and swings like a drunken sailor. This could be their musically most addictive recording to date. Of course, some addictions are better than others.
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Inspired, lunatic brilliance!
author:
                            
The Spankers pull it off like vaudevillian pros and back it up with serious musical talent. Inspired, lunatic brilliance!
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sound of extremely talented musicians
author:
                            
The sound of extremely talented musicians basking in each other's gifts until it becomes more fun than work.
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