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Signor Groove : Indifference Face
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Wacky garage pop a la Beck meets They Might Be Giants.
Genre: Pop: Quirky
Release Date: 2003
Indifference Face
Signor Groove
Record Label: Buried With a Donkey Music
  • Buy CD - $12.00
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Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Weathervane Theme 0:00 Album Only
2. Our Lady of Levittown 0:00 Album Only
3. Sugar Dish 0:00 Album Only
4. The Spectre of Indifference 0:00 Album Only
5. Daisy Eyes Alone 0:00 Album Only
6. Robotic Arms 0:00 Album Only
7. Exsoviet 0:00 Album Only
8. South Dakota Song 0:00 Album Only
9. Weathervane 0:00 Album Only
10. Indifferent Face 0:00 Album Only
11. Organs and Flesh 0:00 Album Only
12. Breakfast in Cuba 0:00 Album Only
13. Standard Grace 0:00 Album Only
14. Monument Valley 0:00 Album Only
15. Armando es el Homre 0:00 Album Only
16. Mother Hen 0:00 Album Only
17. Trivial Things 0:00 Album Only
18. Natural Autumn 0:00 Album Only
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Album Notes

Signor Groove's debut album is an hour-long, Zappa-esque, avant-pop assault. Eighteen album tracks produced over the course of 15 months, largely with beats supplied by an early 1990's model Dr. Rhythm drum machine. Only 1000 were packaged in cardboard sleeves with a paper lyrics insert (future releases will be in a standard jewel case) so this is bound to become an eBay collectible. Really. The album features longtime Signor Groove collaborator Misterholmes as well as Zach Lansdowne of the legendary Northwest indie pop band The Purdins. Franz Gilbertson's much-heralded cover art says it all: Hand-crafted. Shoe-string budget. Independent. Catchy. Epic. Silly.

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REVIEWS

A little long, but fun to listen to
author: Les Cavanaugh
                            
"Indifference Face" reminds me of old They Might Be Giants. This guys seems to like his drum machine. The songs are quirky & poppy, and they stick in your head. One tune, "Daisy Eyes Alone" is this jazzy song kind of like something off Abbey Road or something Steely Dan would do. Anyway, I like it. It's fun to listen to. It's a pretty long CD (18 songs). I think shorter would be better, especially when you're listening to a drum machine for an hour. But I'd recommend it if you like quirky pop.
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The Zappa of our time?
author: Joanna Urrego
                            
Magnificent lyrics. A mosaic of highly unusual, artful, and unexpected transitions. There is no genre to explain the work of this artist. Utterly undanceable, save for Pee-Wee Herman style. Songs end sounding nothing like they did when they started. Delightful, provocative.Long intros often deceptively unlike songs they precede.
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