The Problem With Me

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (107 ratings)
The Problem With Me album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 36:57

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How It's Done

emrf

The sound is definitely of its time, but in the best possible way. The songwriting isn't biting like Pavement, but it mines a particular vein of slacker-calm about as deep as it goes. If you like that old indie rock feeling that Yuck is now semi-successfully replicating, you need to get on this.

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Instant Classic

Jester

Absolutely one of the best albums of the 1990s that still holds up today. Brings backs tons of memories, a soundtrack to my life that Seam captured perfectly. Highly recommended!

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Bad MP3s

Foxymophandlemama

Sound quality wavers in and out through most of the album. Very distracting, and if you have on headphones, extremely annoying and almost unlistenable.

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Seam - The Problem With Me

digi_aussie2004

After 14 years since I first heard this album I finally find it here on emusic. legends. I first heard this cd in a cd store in Hoboken, New Jesersy, USA whilst on holidays. When I got back from holidays to Australia I couldnt find this cd anywhere. Now finally I have it. Cheers to all at emusic for the great selection and prices of music here. I will definately keep my subscription to emusic. Thanks Again, Digi :)

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5 Stars

mdt123

I still get chills when I listen to this album.

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Best of the 90s

Pattycake

This one of my absolutely favorite records of the 90s. Seam is in perfect form here. Essential recording!

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They Say All Music Guide

After the transitional Kernel EP and further lineup shifting, Seam settled into a quartet format, ended up in Chicago to record with Brad Wood, and created one of the best albums of the early ’90s. Heady praise perhaps, but The Problem With Me found Sooyoung Park and company — Lexi Mitchell was once again his fine foil on bass, but for the last time — taking the dreamier wistfulness of the group’s early days and turning in even sharper performances while ratcheting up the emotional impact. It’s not that the fuzz of Headsparks has cleared entirely, but Park sings a touch more directly and his guitars along with those of second guitarist Craig White come across with more slashing, brusque power, carefully shaped to hold and maintain warmth (“Sweet Pea” demonstrates the change to a tee). The result’s a simply marvelous series of songs showing a touch more complexity without sacrificing the yearning, emotional heft the band can carry so well, as “The Wild Cat” readily demonstrates, Park’s confessions of feeling transformed by the music into quiet drama. “Bunch” pulls what was already becoming a cliché-ridden soft/loud/soft approach into a just new enough direction, more subtle than expected and benefiting from Bob Rising’s non-4/4 drumming. Similar contrasts in volume elsewhere also work much more than so many Pixies-via-Nirvana clones of the time — the crumbling-static guitar on “Stage 2000,” the lovely sorrow of “Dust and Turpentine” and “Something’s Burning.” It all builds to a magnificent climax in “Autopilot,” consisting of little more than a muted siren-like guitar loop matched by some extra feedback and chime, Mitchell’s bass acting as the lead melody and Park’s soft, perfectly caught singing. It’s a farewell to the Mitchell/Park partnership, one that, at least musically, went out on top. – Ned Raggett

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