Lohio

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (106 ratings)
Lohio album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 47:27

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Special

straintest

Sometimes a band can be completely solid, or even great, but still in their career they only have one album where everything comes together and any dope can see how special they are. This is that album for the Ass Ponys, in my opinion (not a popular opinion, maybe, among more hardcore fans). It's a heartbreaker. Way underrated.

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Unsung genius

EMUSIC-00B07BDF

This is simply one of the greatest albums ever recorded. It's not a collection of songs, its a coherent and perfect whole. The sensibility is dark and tragic and funny and weird; the music takes country rock places it's never been. My will stipulates that the song "Butterfly" must be played at my funeral. Start there, or with "Nothing Starts Today."

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Hell in a Handbasket

theoldprudesmusicreview

The name gives away the game: Mildly offensive to the mature. It's too much to credit the band with an idea of PoMo irony. The Old Prude grudgingly admits the band is not bad, but the sensibility is the modern extended adolescent preening of so much pop culture that he can't recommend giving a listen.

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Excellent Album from a Quirky Band

BrettCoon

Great southern-influenced rock. I think this is my favorite "undiscovered" gem of the bands I've found on emusic. Another reviewer (and the emusic Genre!) describes this as country music, which isn't quite accurate in my opinion. It has a southern rock sound to me. The lyrics range from clever to puzzling, but are always interesting. I personally like "Lohio" the best of all their albums, though they're consistently good. My favorite songs are "Only" from Lohio, and "Not Since Superman Died" from Grim.

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I really want to love this album

gosatango

I love country music. I really love dark country music. And I really, really love dark, depressing country music. So why don't I love this album? By all rights I should have this on my media player all day long. We are the perfect match. I am intensely attracted to roots rockish country and to twisted humourous lyrics, and the Ass Ponys deliver these in droves. Lead singer Chuck Cleaver has a warped sense of humour, and some of the songs would be genuinely funny if the band didn't sound so tired at times. At their best they have some great REM'ish type moments like on "Fire In the Hole" or the Jayhawks like "Kung Fu Reference". This is a frustrating album to listen to - you get the sense that they are playing way below their potential. After a while the songs just tumble into one another. Mixtaper - an emusic community site

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They Say All Music Guide

“Last Night It Snowed” begins as a gentle ballad, caressed by a quiet piano and sung with a heartfelt longing. Of course that’s before an electric guitar kicks in, bringing a cowpunk assault down upon the unsuspecting listener’s ears. What follows is a fairly eclectic and somewhat depressing alternative country album released by Checkered Past, the label that “loves misery.” Like labelmates 16 Horsepower, the Ass Ponys’ dour disposition seems incapable of finding much hope and sunshine in the world. The subdued opening of “Donald Sutherland” lifts the spirits a bit until Chuck Cleaver sings, “When the moment finally comes/I could be the trigger, you could be the gun/That blows out the back of my skull.” Of course odd lyrics come part and parcel with Cleaver’s point of view, mixing cultural references — Big Macs, the TV series Kung Fu — with deep philosophy. An acoustic guitar lays down a nice base for “Dried Up,” a standout track that vividly contrasts being young and alive to losing one’s edge and “drying up.” “Baby in a Jar” is a fun track, recalling the warped world of the Bad Livers. While Lohio has a number of promising moments, one cannot help but feel that a trip to the Caribbean or perhaps a healthy dose of Prozac would help to lift the Ass Ponys’ sagging spirits. Fans, however, will be pleased that the band has survived a bout with a major label and is still offering its unblinking vision of life in the gutter. – Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

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