You'd Prefer An Astronaut

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (219 ratings)
You'd Prefer An Astronaut album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 45:43

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Poor Man's Siamese Dream...

008FB637

Uh..., sorry Ned Raggett, Gish came out in 1991 and was certified gold. Siamese Dream followed in 1993 and debuted at number ten on the Billboard charts, sold over four million copies in the U.S., six million worldwide, and charted four hit singles Dream: "Cherub Rock", "Today", "Disarm", and "Rocket" so, I think it's a little unfair to say, "Having partially created what many felt was a template for the Smashing Pumpkins to become successful..." Did Hum ever even chart anywhere? Sorry, Ned but, they sound like a VERY POOR man's Smashing Pumpkins to me.

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Dynamic Album

EMUSIC-00B04FC5

This album never gets old, Stars may be one of the all time greatest songs. The pod is driving with a top notch drums. It's great hearing a drummer that's part of the music and not just a beat.

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Totally 90s

lovablejoel

This album was great when it first came out, but it doesn't with-hold the test of time. The sound is too overwrought with feedback and echo-y guitars. Stars is still a great song.

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A classic.

scrapps

If you like music, you should probably have this album. The music is dense and layered, the rhythm driving and strong. This album keeps on giving after 15 years!

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Get it, you won't regret it!

uffda18

One of my all time favorite albums. Great when you're in the mood for some loud crunchy alt rock, with some nice quiet bits thrown in as well.

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One of my favorite albums ever

EMUSIC-01CD7429

When I first heard this album its structure confused me. At times passionate or melancholy, it has a very organic flow. The music is designed to bring you from one part to the next without noticing the trip. The tracks put your head right were it should be for the next song. Definitely built as an album, not just a collection of songs. Add a bit of a space theme with a dash of distopia, and you're in mid-90s-abstract-future heaven. I don't know if all of the lyrics together are meant to tell a story, but the music certainly does.

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one of my favorite albums in High School

nexus

High School sound track.

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They Say All Music Guide

Having partially created what many felt was a template for the Smashing Pumpkins to become successful, Hum found itself in an unenviable spot when the lead single from its major-label debut, “Stars,” became a hit precisely because of that sound. There’s certainly a similar connection at points, what with some fierce, chopping feedback and crisp drum slams, but the lyrical portrait is less solipsistic and somehow the whole song feels more inspirational and dreamy for it. Like the song itself, then, You’d Prefer An Astronaut is, for all the similar love of psychedelic volume in service of emotion, its own beast, most specifically because of the singing. Talbott’s lead vocals are much more restrained than Billy Corgan’s aggro screams, bearing more immediate comparison with, say, Mark Kozelek of the Red House Painters or Stephen Immerwahr of Codeine. Sounding crushed and regretful amid the surge and flow of the music, his singing generally feels very approachable, reflective rather than declarative. When he does let loose with screaming here and there, it’s nowhere near as strained as Corgan, something which a lot of people might be terribly happy about. As for the music, the quartet can work up a thick head of steam without cloning Corgan or James Iha’s metallic rampage, just that little more dreamier and muted around the corners. Songs like “The Pod” and “I’d Like Your Hair Long” certainly recall the chunkier punch of such Pumpkins numbers as “I Am One” and “Cherub Rock,” but, again, they easily stand on their own. Elsewhere, the slow building shimmer and then release of “Why I Like the Robins” is very much the band’s own individual creations, as is the soft, hurt drawl on “The Very Old Man” and the downbeat start of “I Hate It Too,” for all things fire up towards the end. – Ned Raggett

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