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The Eddies : Come Apart & Other Minor Disasters: Best Recordings 1993-1997
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Garage-twang, mod-powerpop
Genre: Pop: Power Pop
Release Date: 2006
Come Apart & Other Minor Disasters: Best Recordings 1993-1997 Record Label: Stereorrific Recordings
  • Download Album (MP3) - $18.97
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Come Apart 3:55 $0.99
Give An Inch 3:29 $0.99
Meg's Still Cool 2:53 $0.99
Typical Male 4:56 $0.99
Valentine (To Myself) 4:23 $0.99
Tried To Romantic 2:31 $0.99
Breakfast Blues #154 3:00 $0.99
Cool Shoes, Cruel Girl 2:56 $0.99
White Socks 2:11 $0.99
From Conversations in a Borrowed Car 4:11 $0.99
Hibachi 2:02 $0.99
London Bridge 4:57 $0.99
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Album Notes

Available for download at iTunes!
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....We burnt our gaslit nineties in a glass of porter in a bar called Toad in a square called Porter that came as a bridge between Cambridge and Somerville, a sweaty city of Greater Boston whose prior claim to rock was "The Monster Mash" by Bobby "Boris" Pickett. There we heard music by a group of ethnic suburbanites who I believe referred to themselves as "The Freddies" ["The Eddies" -Ed.] for reasons with which I'm unacquainted and which seemed, moreover, to elude even them. These "Eggies," formerly known as "Skunkhead," sounded like a Kinks coverband that only played songs by the Modern Lovers, with an occasional nod to Johnny Cash. They made an indelible impression upon my memory; I can't recall whether the bass guitarist was a man or a woman, but I think we once spent the night together. I know the lead guitarist Jake was rumored to be the son of Ted Nugent, hence "The Teddies," though personally I assumed the name alluded to Kennedy, an MTV VJ who later became a senator. The singer, Jeff, was like some bronze god crooning before a crowd of gold and silver people, all of whom wished they were home drinking alone. I got to know the drummer, Jack, pretty well; Toad was so tiny he had to flip a drumstick so you could slip past into the men's room, which for me in those days was a fairly frequent event. No wonder they were known as "The Edgies"! I heard they all joined the Oscillators after that band was no good anymore. Still I always thought they should have made a record... -- from The Memoirs of Rupert Orange

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