Uncle Anesthesia

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (98 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
  • Artist: Screaming Trees (See All Albums by Screaming Trees)
  • Date Released: Jan 29, 1991

  • Genre: Alternative/Punk, Style: Rock, Alternative, Indie Rock, Commercial Alternative

  • Label: Epic

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 46:58

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Gothic, Psychedelic Masterwork.

zachjj

Sharing a melodic kinship to fellow goths such as The Cult and Echo and the Bunnymen, but played with an abandon that brings to mind Jim Morrison via Charles Bukowski. Arguably there strongest set of songs, if not production value/sound quality.

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To be honest...

eMusicMiner

sure I like it, but I have to admit - I was drawn to it by the cover art by Mark Ryden. Very cool. Very, very cool.

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For me, this works better than Sweet Oblivion

nnnoidea

They sound too polished later. Them Conner brothers are big boys. Seeing them rock out on stage while touring for this album was awe-inspiring and a little scary....kind of like twin Tads.....

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Not bad...

Scroobius

...pick up Bed of Roses, Story of Her Fate, and Ocean of Confusion. Then get your self to Sweet Oblivion and start again.

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Personal Favorite

zhvugnah

I am a fan of all the whole Screaming Trees catalog, and this is my favorite album. The SST anthology is an indispensable collection of the band's early years, but this album is the best complete work. It captures both the psychedelic elements of their earlier material and the wahwah drenched rock of their more popular work. The whole album is great but I'll recommend checking out tracks 2, 3, 8, 9, and 12.

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They Say All Media Guide

After a long career with independent label SST, the Screaming Trees arrived at Epic Records with little fanfare (and would leave in much the same way) with 1991′s Uncle Anesthesia. Produced by Soundgarden’s Chris Cornell and metal specialist Terry Date, the album lurches to its feet on the military shuffle of “Beyond This Horizon.” Despite offering a few glimpses of the group’s punkier side — “Story of Her Fate,” “Alice Said,” “Time for Light” — most of the material emphasizes the Trees’ mellower inclinations. As its title and disturbing, Alice in Wonderland-inspired cover artwork would suggest, the album also finds the band delving deeper and deeper into their psychedelic tendencies. Gary Lee Conner’s lysergic guitar textures gently frame Mark Lanegan’s rough, whiskey-drenched vocals on such highlights as the title track, “Caught Between,” and “Something About Today.” And while “Bed of Roses” and “Lay Your Head Down” betray a strong R.E.M. influence, songs like “Before We Arise,” “Closer,” and “Disappearing” (with its Mexican funeral horn section) possess a sense of despair and hopelessness that only Lanegan’s voice can convey. The last album to feature original drummer Mark Pickerel, Uncle Anesthesia also set the stage for the band’s breakthrough, Sweet Oblivion. – Eduardo Rivadavia

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