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The Three EP's

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (25 ratings)
The Three EP's album cover
01
Dry The Rain
6:07
$1.29
02
I Know
3:58
$1.29
03
B And A
6:35
$1.29
04
Dog's Got A Bone
5:57
$1.29
05
Inner Meet Me
6:18
$1.29
06
The House Song
7:16
$1.29
07
The Monolith
15:48
08
She's The One
8:19
$1.29
09
Push It Out
5:26
$1.29
10
It's Over
3:47
$1.29
11
Dr Baker
4:10
$1.29
12
Needles In My Eyes
4:32
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 78:13

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eMusic Review 0

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Marc Hogan

eMusic Contributor

Marc Hogan has been occasionally getting paid to write about music since 2003. His music writing has appeared, with enormously varying degrees of regularity, in...more »

05.18.11
Brilliantly establishing their initial sound and raising the stakes for what pop could be
2003 | Label: CAROLINE ASTRALWERKS - CAT

Nothing could suit the Beta Band's music better than the truth that their greatest album isn't an "album" at all. The Scottish group's defining characteristic was its overabundance of ideas, and if some of them were half baked, well, that was still a contrast to the stultifying conservatism of late-'90s rock radio. Compiling a trio of four-song records issued over 1997 and 1998, The Three E.P.'s brilliantly establishes the Beta Band's initial sound: a genre-blending hodgepodge of dusty breakbeats, pastoral guitars, monk-like chants, cosmic grooves and oddball instrumentation.

Arriving a year after Beck's Odelay, with endorsements from Oasis, Radiohead and the Beastie Boys, The Three E.P.'s did something still nearly impossible: unite fans of Britpop, indie rock, electronica and jam. Despite a member devoted to turntables and samplers, these guys were at their best when their loping rhythms and hazy textures were met with equally compelling melodies and lyrical concepts — see the twangy, trumpet-kissed reassurance anthem "Dry the Rain," or the didgeridoo-based swell of psych-pop love song "She's the One." Encompassing ramshackle folk-pop, ambient abstraction and even goofy rap, The Three E.P.'s raised the stakes for what pop could be, whether or not the group… read more »

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This is the real "Trance" music

Wanderer

"Dry the Rain" was featured in a memorable scene from the movie, High Fidelity, where record store owner, John Cusack, effectuates involuntary head bobbing throughout the store by playing this little known (at the time) band. "She's the One" is even more trance inducing. At times the record can be a bit monotonous but there's not much quite like it. I only knew this record before the EMI drop. Later releases appear to have more conventional and concise material but also seem to have somewhat better production values.

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better than any of their actual albums

shweeney

could be argued they peaked too early - the first song on their first EP ("Dry the Rain") is probably their finest moment, but "Inner Meet Me" and "She's the One" are as good and the rest of this CD is uniformly excellent, even 16 minute freakout "The Monolith". They should've stuck to just making EPs.

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They Say All Music Guide

That Oasis and Radiohead, the two biggest names in U.K. rock during the ’90s, separately made claims in 1999 about creating a “Beta Band record” (even though neither band actually did) speaks volumes about the impact of The 3 E.P.’s. With reference points literally all across the map, the Beta Band still managed a sound that was startlingly fresh, broadly appealing to fans of jam bands, indie rock, electronica, and Brit-pop, which is no small feat in and of itself. Rather than a full-length debut, per se, The 3 E.P.’s is, as the name suggests, a collection of three limited-edition EPs which were released between 1997 and 1998 on the U.K. indie Regal Records. As such, the songs display an off-the-cuff charm which is as refreshing as it is unforced, revealing a natural progression by the band from humble folk/indie rock beginnings (“Dry the Rain,” made famous in a brilliant scene in 2000′s High Fidelity) to full-out psychedelic pop endings (“Needles in My Eye”). Throughout The 3 E.P.’s, rather than employing the typical verse-chorus-verse song structure exhausted by ’90s alternative rock, the Beta Band successfully mines Krautrock, the Canterbury Scene, hip-hop drum loops, and even ’70s funk and soul to build their songs around infectious beats, grooves, and melodies. And while many of the songs cause instant head-bobbing (witness High Fidelity), they are also helped along by Stephen Mason’s alternately mantra-like and free-association vocal lines, which also manage to display a trace of sadness and introspection amid hippie-ish come-together sentiments. Despite a couple of experimental clunkers (the overly long instrumental “Monolith” and the rap during “The House Song”), it is precisely the Beta Band’s skill at juxtaposition which prevents The 3 E.P.’s in being merely an exercise in met expectations (like the vast majority of ’90s alternative rock). Although much of the album’s popularity stemmed from its contrast with the tedious state of music upon its release, The 3 E.P.’s indeed transcends on many levels. Only a band without anything to lose or gain could create music like this, and in the end eclecticism has and will rarely sound better. – Aaron Warshaw

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