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When the Going Gets Dark

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (107 ratings)

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When the Going Gets Dark album cover
01
Alice the Goon
4:15
02
The Rhino
2:35
03
When the Going Gets Dark
4:05
04
I Don't Know You Anymore
2:59
05
Peace and Love
2:44
06
Beyond the Sky
4:02
07
Presto-Change-o
3:07
08
Poverty Sucks
3:23
09
Merry X-Mas
5:42
10
Death Culture Blues
4:51
11
Invisible Star
5:05
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 42:48

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eMusic Review 0

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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 »

04.22.11
A power duo fights the death culture blues.
Label: Touch And Go

Sleater-Kinney drummer Janet Weiss and singer-guitarist Sam Coomes (her ex-husband; check out his old band the Donner Party) make up Quasi, a duo that sounds like an armored legion. They've got one foot in the grandeur of classic rock (that guitar solo on "Invisible Star" is long-haired and proud of it), and the other in the indie gutter. Coomes and Weiss have been recording in their own Portland studio for the last few years, and this album, their seventh, is their most stompingly pissed-off and embittered: at political liars, at personal betrayals, at the "death culture blues."

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Portland

jugaluck

Douglas Wolk describes Quasi as "pissed off & embittered"-FYI this describes everybody in Portland-it's something in the water. That being said, this album is refreshing because of the new ground they cover

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Always great Quasi

FormulaBoy

"Review" by Douglas Wolk? Give me a break. Send him back to his desk to finish it!

user avatar

...the tough get downloading

KfuMike

A great cross between the Flaming Lips and The Fiery Furnaces. Frontman Sam Coomes belts a few numbers out with a great Paul Westerburg like wail. Check out "Death Culture Blues" and The Rhino".

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They Say All Music Guide

For their seventh album, Janet Weiss and Sam Coomes decided to forgo the bells and whistles and focus on what really makes Quasi Quasi: the two of them. To do this, they stick to their straightforward piano/guitar/drums combo (which doesn’t mean, however, that this is a back-to-basics lo-fi record; there’s still a lap steel and various layered keyboard synthesizers and sound effects — including bells and whistles — in there) and When the Going Gets Dark finds the duo very focused and musically solid, resulting in the seemingly incongruous combination of a clean, well-played album with a messy, muddy sound. Weiss is great on the drums, attacking rock beats head on and adding aggressive fills, and Coomes is a more than respectable guitar and keys player; his overdriven Fender is percussive and expressive, and his acoustic piano can change from almost sloppy chord-pounding to free jazz riffing. He takes some solos with both instruments, but they’re short and polite, and don’t take away from the energy and dynamism between him and Weiss. Coomes also cuts back on his vocals throughout the record, singing only a few short verses (or nothing at all, in the instrumental “Presto Chang-o”) and a chorus or two, and while there are still politically charged songs (the rollicking “Death Culture Blues,” for example, where he voices anger over the fact “We’re told just to get in line/And bow down to the almighty dollar sign”), there’s not the direct attack found on Hot Shit. Weiss, for the most part, stays behind the kit, though when she does sing harmony she sounds good, and complements the edgier songs with her softer voice. Yeah, sometimes Quasi get a little too carried away with themselves and the album seems a bit directionless, but that’s only when they move away from the grit and into the prettier, synth-based tunes (like the very oh-right-Dave-Fridmann-produced-this-album “Beyond the Sky” and the closer, “Invisible Star,” which has an unfortunate resemblance to something that should be at a high-school graduation). But when Quasi play like how they started out over ten years ago — two people, three instruments, and a lot of passion — they’re grittier, bluesier, and tighter than ever, and they’re absolutely fantastic. – Marisa Brown

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