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Tracklist (Vinyl)
| | Champion Versions | | | A1 | | Dry The Rain | | 6:05 | A2 | | I Know | | 3:58 | A3 | | B + A | | 6:35 | B1 | | Dogs Got A Bone | | 5:58 | | | The Patty Patty Sound | | | B2 | | Inner Meet Me | | 6:20 | See more tracksB3 | | The House Song | | 7:15 | C1 | | Monolith | | 15:48 | C2 | | She's The One | | 8:21 | | | Los Amigos Del Beta Bandidos | | | D1 | | Push It Out | | 5:22 | D2 | | It's Over | | 3:50 | D3 | | Dr. Baker | | 4:08 | D4 | | Needles In My Eyes | | 4:32 | | | CD | | | CD-1 | | Dry The Rain | | | CD-2 | | I Know | | | CD-3 | | B + A | | | CD-4 | | Dogs Got A Bone | | | CD-5 | | Inner Meet Me | | | CD-6 | | The House Song | | | CD-7 | | Monolith | | | CD-8 | | She’s The One | | | CD-9 | | Push It Out | | | CD-10 | | It’s Over | | | CD-11 | | Dr. Baker | | | CD-12 | | Needles In My Eyes | | |
* Items below may differ depending on the release.
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Review Part Scottish, part English and totally twisted, the Beta Band is making someof the most invigorating new music in Britain. Except that nothing on TheThree E.P.'s, a roundup of the group's initial minialbum releases, reallyseems to go pop! -- at first. With melting-brass licks, Stephen Mason'sspindly slide guitar and his sleepy Gregorian-blues moan, the opening number,"Dry the Rain," moves like the Rolling Stones' "No Expectations" at sixteenrpm. Imagine Pavement without the amps, the Verve drunk and unplugged, Beckminus the white-soul-dada… Read More routine, and you have the bruised folk-with-funk mixof cheapo electronics, scrap-yard percussion and fireside-raga vocals in "IKnow" and "Inner Meet Me." But Mason, bassist Richard Greentree, drummer Robin Jones and DJ John McLeanare up to a subtle, eclectic mischief that really goes back to the Beatles'White Album via the Beastie Boys' Paul's Boutique and theradical sound games of the German band Faust. "B+A" is a blast of mad-hatterdynamics: McLean's rusted-drum-machine samples, modal chanting, a huge groovedriven by pie-plate-cymbal crashes. The first half of the eight-minute "She'sthe One" is a bleary torch song with whooping synth, boxy percussion and aMinnie Mouse-vocal chorus. Then Mason's chiming, George Harrison-like guitarpops out of the murk and the simple, repeated chorus ("She's the one for me")becomes a "Hey Jude"-style blowout. The Betas need some lessons in brevity; "The House Song" and "Monolith" areoverlong dub yawns. Yet there is something cleansing-a purity of spirit anda tripped-out glee-about the lava-flow tempo and insidiously catchy clutterof The Three E.P.'s. The Beta Band takes its sweet, loopy time blowingyour mind, but it does the job right. (RS 805) DAVID FRICKE
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