Dancing Under Water

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 42:45

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can't go wrong with Freakwater

smartyboots

This was the first Freakwater album I ever heard, and I couldn't believe there was someone under the age of a million who was playing this kind of music. Standout tracks are Great Potential (showing off Catherine Irwin's trademark sarcasm that would be honed even sharper on subsequent albums), Fill My Thermos and Wild And Blue

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One of my five favorite albums

Salohcin

I wasn't even aware of the (alt. country movement)untill after discovering this group. (My Old Drunk Friend)from, Feels like the Third Time,was the first thing I heard by Freakwater. I thought wow what is this? It sounds like country music except I realy like it. I down loaded everything Amazon had and put it on a cd and fell in love with Cathrine Irwin and Janet Beveridge Bean. Dancing Under Water was the first album I purchased. I don't know if I have ever bought a record that I loved every track on first listen, untill this one. The stand outs are the ones that were penned by Cathrine Irwin. I generaly don't even listen to the lyrics. I can't help but to listen very carefully to Cathrine's words, and those harmonies. I can't describe them. Download these tracks and listen for yourself. These are the best five albums on this sight. Just because it's an opinion doesn't mean it can't be true. I'll be (Thinking Of You)

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They Say All Media Guide

Dancing Under Water, Freakwater’s first long-player, is insurgent country music for people who believe that the film Deliverance says more about the true nature of rural folks than it does about the fears and prejudices of city dwellers. The songs, just under half of which are original, fixate on the folk traditions of murder ballads and “dead child” songs, performed simply with ragged duet harmonies in a modern approximation of the Carter Family. The difference between Freakwater and the early country artists who performed similar material is that Freakwater approaches (and, in some cases, writes) these songs from an ironic distance with an indie rock perspective. Some listeners may wish that Catherine Irwin and Janet Beveridge Bean had practiced their vocal parts a few more times before committing them to tape, but the general audience for this music will relish its naïve primitivism. The pedal steel and Dobro, contributed by John Spiegel and John Rice, add a professional touch, although the cover of George Jones’ minor hit “You’re Still on My Mind” shows that the group is better off when they avoid straight country. Other covers include Jon Anderson’s number one hit “Wild and Blue” (also recorded by the Mekons around this time) and Bill Monroe’s “Little Girl and the Dreadful Snake.” Dancing Under Water was originally paired with Freakwater’s self-titled debut mini-album for CD release, but was reissued by Thrill Jockey in 1997 without the bonus. – Greg Adams

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