What Fun Life Was

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (117 ratings)
What Fun Life Was album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 48:31

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greatest album by the greatest band ever

RMutt

Listen to it 2 or 3 times to let it sink in--preferably alone in a dark room with headphones--and see if you disagree. It still gives me goosebumps 17 years later.

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The whole album's great, but....

spam4kel

"Bedside Table" is one of the greatest songs of its genre. Whatever genre you want to put it into.

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punches me in the gut 16 years later...

mh2thman

this album is the ultimate of all slowcore albums.

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best of their three

okaybyron

great bummer-rock. for sound-alikes, think of galaxie 500 or some mid-60s velvet underground (but more melodically intricate than either).

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Whatfunlifewas

Rude

I was introduced to bedhead with this album. It is their best one period.

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They Say All Music Guide

It didn’t seem like it at the time, but with the appearance of this, Bedhead’s debut, and Low’s own first album some months later, the zeitgeist of post-grunge indie rock started to shift toward something more reflective and restrained. Not that WhatFunLifeWas doesn’t steer clear of loud moments, to be sure; many of the songs use swelling transitions from quieter to noisier performance and back, all while avoiding the abrupt soft-loud-soft cliché of the time. However, even at the band’s most explosive, there’s less a sense of getting ripped out of your head on sound than there is a tension between steady, careful performance (drummer Martinez especially so) and more wide-ranging power. The various comparisons to the Velvet Underground, Joy Division, and Spacemen 3 all make a certain sense, but even at this early stage of the band’s life, Bedhead have much more of an individual sensibility, something that fuses and looks beyond rather than simply rehashing. Things sometimes can be a touch more playful than expected — “To the Ground” is almost jaunty — but otherwise the moods are calm and often blue, and a large part of that lies in the singing. Matt Kadane’s soft, understated semi-drawl doesn’t slot easily into comparisons, and its contrast with the band’s music is often striking. “Haywire,” an epic guitar blast with an almost giddy surge to music and performance, gets additional intensity against Kadane’s barely-there vocals. In the quieter moments, like the openings of “Crushing” or even more so, the flat-out lovely “Powder,” the intensity level is ratcheted even higher; the overall performance is not so much easy listening as it is a prompting to listeners, who must lean forward to catch everything. Add the intertwined guitar work of both Kadane brothers, who combine power and control excellently, and listeners need ask for little more. – Ned Raggett

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