CLICK AND COLLECT FROM OUR BRISTOL STORE

Rise


Access your saved basket or create new account


Basket

 
0 items
£ —
Checkout

Latest Stock


2 for £5 Books



Presales : 10% Off LP Pre-Orders. Discount code: PRESALE



You Can't Beat the Classics



Stones Throw Records



Record Players At Rise!




279597
Formats

  • BBQCD2145CD  £12.00Expected 19th May 2017
    X

    Double CD with a 17 track live album - Recorded in London at ULU (University of London Union) in 1992.


  • BBQLP2145Long Player  £20.00Expected 19th May 2017
    X

    Double LP with a 10 track live album - Recorded in London at ULU (University of London Union) in 1992. The download features the full 17 Track Live Set.

Label

Beggars Banquet

Buffalo Tom

Let Me Come Over 25th Anniversary Edition


Buffalo Tom (Bill Janovitz, Chris Colbourn and Tom Maginnis) formed at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst in 1984 - a breeding ground of post punk guitar bands like Dinosaur Jr. and Pixies. They thrived on college radio in the late 1980’s and toured extensively in Europe, the US, Australia and Japan. In 1992 the band recorded their third album Let Me Come Over with a varied group of songs they had been developing at home and on the road - mixing their live power trio sound with some more acoustic based guitar ballads. The album’s single Taillights Fade would become their signature song. 2017 marks the 25th anniversary of this album, and to celebrate, Beggars Arkive reissue it on vinyl and CD and package it with a live album. Recorded in London at ULU (University of London Union) in 1992, this marks the band’s first-ever live release. The double LP contains 10 live tracks, and the CD edition contains the entire show (17 songs).
On its first two albums, Buffalo Tom constructed towering guitar-scapes and mastered a naturalistic version of quiet-to-loud dynamics. So, for its third, we found Buffalo Tom shedding a bit, but not all of the skin it had worn and emerging with its charms more front and center. Let Me Come Over is the sound of the trio exiting the insular underground for the wide world of “alternative” rock - but more or less bringing its best moves along with it, too. Previously loosely linked with fellow travelers Dinosaur Jr. and Uncle Tupelo via a similar three-piece format, stunning depth of songwriting and association with Boston’s Fort Apache Studios - it’s not hard to imagine Buffalo Tom wanted to stake a claim stylistically. Yet, Let Me Come Over never feels like a break with the past, it’s a transition. Inside that abstruse cover are undeniably magnificent tunes.
Staples is emblematic of a band in flux with a grungy lyrical conceit rendered with hi-fi guitar squalls. It’s the first single Taillights Fade, however, where the band appears to find a new comfort zone, at an unhurried speed where Janovitz’s storytelling and car crash metaphors stand the best chance of making an impression. It plays with quiet-to-loud dynamics, and as for emotional expression, it swings for the bleachers--and a place on alternative rock radio. Mineral jangles in a similar vein and makes grand gestures. Darl and Larry (referencing the brothers from the Newhart show I always thought?) are solid but disparate cuts. Colbourn’s Darl feels a bit like an outlier with its thrashy feel - it sounds better louder. Larry has a sweetness to it that’s augmented by its busker’s strumming. Released as a second single, Velvet Roof had given us a taste of what was newly possible, a hook-heavy stomper with a densely woven rhythm matched by tight lyric writing - each piece expertly crafted to go into the next, no frayed ends here - and a snazzy mix by Ron Saint Germain, a pro who would later bring out the best in Soundgarden. A wailing harmonica solo gives it all a swagger that’s kind of new for the band. Stymied summons the emotional intensity of Birdbrain - it’s probably the album’s darkest moment. Somehow both life-affirming and wistful Porchlight contrasts with the way Saving Grace blazes through the barroom like a ‘Mats tribute. There’s no filler to be found here. Frozen Lake sees the band caressing acoustic guitars in comedown mode. Let Me Come Over is kind of a short story collection with equal parts thunder and intimacy, hills and valleys, last night’s mistakes and tomorrow’s contrition. Ultimately, it’s possibility, a sense of ‘hey, this just might work’ that makes it such a deep spin 25 years later. Let Me Come Over triumphs.

Tracklist
  • 1. Staples
    2. Taillights Fade
    3. Mountains Of Your Head
    4. Mineral
    5. Darl
    6. Larry
    7. Velvet Roof
    8. I'm Not There
    9. Stymied
    10. Porchlight
    11. Frozen Lake
    12. Saving Grace
    13. Crutch

    Disc 2
    1. Birdbrain (Live From London ULU 1992)
    2. Staples (Live From London ULU 1992)
    3. Taillights Fade (Live From London ULU 1992)
    4. Impossible (Live From London ULU 1992)
    5. Enemy (Live From London ULU 1992)
    6. Larry (Live From London ULU 1992)
    7. Velvet Roof (Live From London ULU 1992)
    8. Fortune Teller (Live From London ULU 1992)
    9. Sally Brown (Live From London ULU 1992)
    10. The Bus (Live From London ULU 1992)
    11. The Crawl (Live From London ULU 1992)
    12. Mineral (Live From London ULU 1992)
    13. Sunflower Suit (Live From London ULU 1992)
    14. I'm Not There (Live From London ULU 1992)
    15. Bleeding Heart (Live From London ULU 1992)
    16. Skeleton Key (Live From London ULU 1992)
    17. Reason Why (Live From London ULU 1992)

Related Items