Vintage Slide Collections From Seattle, Vol. 1

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (14 ratings)
Vintage Slide Collections From Seattle, Vol. 1 album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 35:14

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Jay Ruttenberg

eMusic Contributor

Jay Ruttenberg is editor of the comedy magazine the Lowbrow Reader as well as the Lowbrow Reader Reader, a book anthology due next year from Drag City. He has w...more »

04.22.11
A very unique family act.
Label: Bar/None Records

The Trachtenburg Family offers an unlikely collision of contemporary indie-rock and old-time vaudeville. It's a true family business: Father Jason writes and sings songs about slides uncovered at garage sales, mother Tina mans the slide projector, and daughter Rachel drums. Though the band is perhaps best experienced live, Jason is a gifted writer of '60s-inspired pop songs, and this debut album turns the focus onto these sparkling melodies. One thing it does miss is the group's generous onstage jokes. "I told my parents we were playing a concert for Radical Jews, a group against occupation," Jason recently explained onstage. "They said, 'What kind of Jew isn't into his job?'"

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

See them LIVE!

xequalsx

I was lucky enough to catch this super fun family when they came through my town. You really need to see them to get the whole effect. Rachel, the cute little girl drummer even signed my t-shirt! SEE 'EM LIVE!

user avatar

Refreshing, literate, lighthearted

Belyal

What fun! This D.I.Y. troupe is definitely onto something. The songs are mainly pop gems, the lyrics are smart without being cynical, and the joy is infectious. Baravo, kids!

user avatar

Interesting..

EMUSIC-servalansrazor

I actually really like this album, its sense of humour is broad and quirky but the placement of European Boys as the second track could have been re-thought, most irritating - but once past that the going is good and great fun was had by all!!

user avatar

great set from an interesting group

mindfullyso

Everyone who catches me listening to this cd thinks I'm weird. It's definitely an acquired taste, but once you develop the taste you'll want more. Most of these songs are really cheap left-wing jokes, each of which have it's own groove. You won't get tired of the music on this album, although I personally recommend buying the disc which comes with 2 slideshows.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Jewish Musicians

By Jay Ruttenberg, eMusic Contributor

Like its flamboyant cousin Gaydar, Jewdar can be applied to pop music as well as to people. Distinguishing a Jewish musician goes beyond searching for a prominent schnozz or knotty surname. Jews who rock tend to do so with rigorous lyricism, a political underpinning and a degree of irony. People are often taken aback to learn that, say, fire-breathing Gene Simmons was once Israeli immigrant Chaim Klein Witz. But the ascendancy of Simmons 'people in… more »

They Say All Music Guide

On Vintage Slide Collections From Seattle, Vol. 1, Jason Trachtenburg assembled the Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players, a colorful group of musicians including his daughter Rachel Trachtenburg on drums and Presidents of the United States of America frontman Chris Ballew on bass. At the band’s live shows, Trachtenburg’s wife, Tina Trachtenburg, serves as slide projectionist, adding a dizzying visual element to the festivities. The music is unabashedly light and fun-loving, much like the off-kilter epics on Trachtenburg’s 2000 Revolutions Per Minute disc. After an energetic beginning, the light piano at the beginning of “Mountain Trip to Japan, 1959″ hints at a new subdued style. The song eventually reinvents itself into another of Trachtenburg’s semi-vaudeville-style classics. He shares vocal duties with his daughter on the fourth track, “Eggs.” “Wendy’s Sambo’s and Long John Silver’s” is another in a long line of serious-sounding musical statements, with the singer’s tongue firmly in cheek. He goes on to again attack the fast-food industry with “Let’s Not Have the Same Weight in 1978 — Let’s Have More.” The piano and handclaps on “Why Did We Decide to Take This Decision to You?” add immensely to the short and feverish track. The disc ends with “Believing in You,” Trachtenburg’s heart-on-his-sleeve ballad, with his piano work again taking center stage. After cutting his teeth in Seattle’s open-mike clubs, he assembled this dramatic live group. Robb Benson guests on harmonies, while Fastbacks member Mike Musburger drums on some tracks and Phil Hurley and Hugh Sutton check in on guitar and accordion, respectively. The disc’s 11 songs are somehow fuller and more complete than his previous work. Orange Recordings released the disc in late 2001. – Stephen Cramer

more »