Bakesale: Deluxe Edition

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Bakesale: Deluxe Edition album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 40   Total Length: 104:52

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

06.10.11
A mix of snappy, self-reflective pop songs and fuming rockers
2011 | Label: Sub Pop Records

Sebadoh's great subject was tricky interpersonal dynamics, and their records usually seemed like they were half collective acrobat act, half power struggle; even on a musical level, they were the rare '90s indie-rock band as interested in Joni Mitchell as in Black Sabbath. In the mid-period incarnation that produced this 1994 wonder, guitarist Lou Barlow mostly fired off the snappy, self-reflective pop songs (his most passionate song here, "Skull," is about getting high), and bassist Jason Loewenstein specialized in the fuming rockers. But the Bakesale-era Sebadoh was subject to no rules except constant reinvention and self-contradiction — there are three different drummers here, one of whom (Bob Fay) wrote and sang "Temptation Tide" with his Unconvinced bandmate Anne Slinn. The album's sequence rolls out like a great, bizarre mix tape from a tightly wound romantic who's not sure if he wants to spend the rest of his life with you, never see you again, or just, you know, hang out and smoke a bowl.

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$14 from Subpop site

jbfester

I hate to leave emusic, but it's just not the value it once was.

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the shitz

ernie-c

the best stuff is on the original album, but you still should hear it if you haven't in a while.

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Still don´t know what it´s about....

Vuilnisrat

..., but I love the songs ´Careful´ and ´Drama Mine´. I once bought this hardcopy-CD especially for the line "watch out for my bullshit, everybody's got it" (in Careful). The two soldiers he's singing about, I still don't get it, but what a great song. Drama mine speaks for itself ;-)

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Sebadoh's Bakesale couldn't have arrived at a more opportune moment. The Boston trio — singer-songwriters Lou Barlow (bass) and Jason Loewenstein (guitar) and drummer Eric Gaffney, replaced after the initial album session by Bob Fay — had begun with releases (many of them simply Barlow working alone on his four-track) on tiny labels like Homestead. They'd built up a word-of-mouth fanbase and a decent packet of press clips by the time Sub Pop signed them… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Sebadoh started out as the hobby of two guys hanging out in a dorm room with a four-track cassette machine and some weed, but by 1994, Lou Barlow’s side project had matured into a real rock band, and on Bakesale, they sounded more like one than ever before. With Eric Gaffney gone, the spotlight was firmly on Barlow and his songs, and he stepped out with some of his best work to date; the navel-gazing confessions of “Not a Friend” and “Dreams” were more articulate and deeply felt than his previous efforts, and there’s an edgy grace in his melodies, while he brings some scrappy but committed rock & roll guitar bashing to “License to Confuse” and “Magnet’s Coil.” Bassist Jason Loewenstein’s tunes aren’t as strong overall as Barlow’s, but they’re effective in context, and their minor-key twists and turns complement his bandmate’s work very well. And though Sebadoh had clearly learned a lot from their years of lo-fi woodshedding, on Bakesale they were working in genuine recording studios with functioning equipment, and instead of having to struggle to hear the songs through layers of aural murk, here Sebadoh burst forth from the speakers loud and clear. And this version of the band stood up well to scrutiny; Barlow, Loewenstein, and drummer Bob Fay may not have been the tightest band on earth, but they had the energy and the commitment to make these songs work, and the simple, direct, and emotionally naked sound of Bakesale served them well, and the album ranks with the most powerful and accessible music they would ever release. Bakesale confirmed that in both theory and execution, Sebadoh had matured into a great indie rock band, and if their obsession with doomed love and fractured self-worth still seemed adolescent, they had at very least grown from eighth graders to high school seniors, and that’s a pretty big leap if you’re willing to look back on it. – Mark Deming

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