Showroom Of Compassion

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Showroom Of Compassion album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Cake (See All Albums by Cake)
  • Date Released: Jan 11, 2011

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

  • Label: Upbeat Records

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:32

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Karen Schoemer

eMusic Contributor

Karen Schoemer hosts "The Schoemer Show" on WGXC 90.7 fm Hudson/Catskill and www.wgxc.org. She is the author of Great Pretenders: My Strange Love Affair with '5...more »

12.08.10
Their most serious attempt to be taken seriously
2011 | Label: Upbeat Records

If the members of Cake took an oath against irony, recorded an album of Von Trapp Family favorites and brought baskets of puppies and kittens onstage, would the world finally accept their sincerity? Showroom of Compassion, the alt-pop quintet's first album of new material since 2004, is their most serious attempt to be taken seriously. Recorded in a studio powered by solar energy, it maintains their funk-lite rhythms, schmaltz-trumpet flourishes and whingy keyboards, but adds heavier guitars, Beatlesque harmonies and even a riff from Moonlight Sonata. Singer John McCrea still deadpans and talk-sings, but several tracks are either directly or indirectly topical. "Federal Funding" crams together '70s soul, '60s psychedelia and a whiff of electronica to slam corporations that pillage government coffers; "Got to Move" and "Sick of You" skewer mindless consumption and the dissatisfaction it brings. "Every camera, every phone/ All the music that you own/ Won't change the fact you're all alone," McCrea lectures. "What's Now Is Now" doesn't exactly lay a heart bare, but it is a chilling evocation of the way couples manipulate each other even when they're apologizing, built around isolated strums on a ratty-sounding guitar.

Cake does a noble job of addressing the hollow core… read more »

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not so sharp of an edge

IndyAero

Cake has received a lot of criticism over the years for being too quirky, ironic, and smug. But isn't that the reason we love them? With this album, it appears that the years have softened them, and they listened to their critics too much. A couple of tracks score, and some grow on you, but there's nothing of the caliber of Short Skirt/Long Jacket, The Distance, or No Phone. Let's hope they find their way back to their smug irony with a new album. It would be tragic if this becomes their last.

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a bit stale, honestly

1dermutt

as a longtime Cake fan, i was genuinely excited for the new album and had high hopes for it—perhaps too high. this album may not be any worse than their earlier material, but it's not any better, either. like previous records, this one has a couple standout tracks and some forgettable filler. i definitely hope the band continues to make its unique breed of unabashedly fun, playful music. but for me this slice of Cake seems a bit stale.

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If You Like Cake, This Is For You

Eclectic1

I have other Cake CDs, my favorite being "Prolonging the Magic". This is like the others for me, a few tracks I love, a few I like and a few I could do without. For the enthusiast, get them all and give them a listen, you'll find your own favorites among this collection of true-to-sound Cake music.

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Take........Cake

willhe

I downloaded SICK OF YOU, and then watched the video 5 more times . Thanks emusic!.......My very best Cake...SHORT SKIRT-LONG JACKET...I listen to that almost daily!

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great stuff.

ceees

They just get better with each record.

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Six Years for this?

BIKEKING

On a whole this record disappoints. You'd think after 6 years they'd have come up with something a bit more consistent. There are only 2-4 good-great tracks. Save $ and only download those.

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They Say All Music Guide

Willful eccentricity is something that demands a certain degree of commitment, and many bands that start out strikingly weird buckle under the pressure to maintain their curious image over the course of a long career. So Cake are to be commended for sticking to their oddball guns for close to 20 years; their sixth album (and first in six years), 2011′s Showroom Of Compassion, still finds John McCrea writing like he’s tossing off random thoughts as he struggles not to be overwhelmed by the voices in his head, and singing as if he’s waiting for that grilled cheese sandwich he ordered to finally show up. And his backing musicians — Vincent DiFiore on trumpet and keyboards, Xan McCurdy on guitar, Gabriel Nelson on bass and guitar, and a tag team of four drummers — still cut a geeky but potent groove, delivering a funky undertow that’s engaging but just off-kilter enough to match McCrea’s vision. This might suggest Cake haven’t grown or changed much during the long layoff between 2004′s Pressure Chief and 2011′s Showroom of Compassion, and in many respects, that’s true, but the flatness of McCrea’s vocal delivery sounds noticeably less smug this time out, and while his deadpan tone is as bent as ever, on a few of these songs he suggests some compassion might lurk in his heart, a welcome development to be sure. And while most of these tunes maintain the funky tone that’s Cake’s trademark, there’s enough straightforward rock & roll and quirky pop (and even a dash of country) to keep the album from sounding too lamentably consistent. After paying oblique homage to Frank Sinatra in 1996′s Fashion Nugget, here Cake actually cover one of Ol’ Blue Eyes lesser-known tunes (“What’s Now Is Now,” from Sinatra’s unjustly obscure concept album Watertown), and McCrea and company twist it to their own purposes without sounding as if they’re ranking out on the original. And though it’s as hard as ever to figure out just what Cake are on about on most of these tunes (especially on the dour but dramatic instrumental “Teenage Pregnancy,”) “Sick of You” and “The Winter” are straightforward enough to offer a break from the irony. It’s worth noting that after dealing with major labels since 1995, Cake have opted to release Showroom Of Compassion on their own label, and even recorded the whole thing in their own solar-powered recording studio; they’re not just committing to their own weirdness, they’re banking on it, and the results are good enough to suggest they’re not so crazy to be investing in their own distaff vision of the world. – Mark Deming

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