Syndetics cover image
Image from Syndetics

The power and the glory / The Bad Ends.

By: Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: NW6536 | New West RecordsCD-NW-6536 | New West RecordsPublisher: [Burbank, CA] : New West Records, [2022]Copyright date: ©2022Description: 1 audio disc (approximately 37 min.) : CD audio ; 4 3/4 inContent type:
  • performed music
Media type:
  • audio
Carrier type:
  • audio disc
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
The power. Mile marker 29 -- All your friends are dying -- Left to be found -- Thanksgiving 1915 -- Ode to José. The glory. The ballad of Satan's bride -- Little black cloud -- Honestly -- New York murder suicide.
Production credits:
  • Produced by Mike Albanese and the Bad Ends.
The Bad Ends (Mike Mantione, vocals, guitar ; Billy Berry, drums, percussion, guitars, electric sitar ; Dave Domizi, bass, backing vocals, cello, piano ; Christian Lopez, guitars, mandolin, banjo ; Geoff Melkonian, keyboards, piano, backing vocals, guitars, violin, viola, glockenspiel, accordian) ; with special guests.
Audiovisual profile: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Dr. James Carlson Library CD POP/ROCK Bad Ends Available 33111009990264
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Calling the Bad Ends a "supergroup" could conceivably be a stretch as there's only one genuine rock star in the band. That would be Bill Berry, who gained fame as a drummer and songwriter for R.E.M., the biggest band to ever come out of Athens, Georgia. Five Eight, a group led by guitarist/vocalist Mike Mantione, followed in the footsteps of R.E.M., occasionally sharing bills with the band, yet there's no comparing the popularity of the two musicians: one is a cult figure, the other toured the world and elsewhere. Despite these varying levels of notoriety, Berry and Mantione occupy a similar status in Athens, where they're both fixtures in the city's rock scene. The Power and the Glory, the debut album from the duo's band the Bad Ends, not only serves as a celebration of all things garage and jangle, it effectively continues a story begun over 40 years ago, as it finds these veteran rockers wrestling with the consequences of aging. It's not accidental that the record's first single is "All Your Friends Are Dying." Mantione spends the record grappling with loss, change, and decay, finding the world changing as he remains still at the center. Sometimes, he addresses this quiet tumult in an earnest, quiet fashion. More often, he creates a righteous noise, not so much battling against the twilight as celebrating the moment. This is where Berry comes in. He's a subtle, sympathetic drummer on the ballads, but he still plays with a mighty thunder on the rockers, his rhythms enlivening songs that are unapologetically throwbacks to the glory days of college rock. The enthusiasm of the execution helps keep The Power and the Glory from sounding like an exercise in nostalgia, as do Mantione's earnest, unguarded songs: this is music that exists entirely in its own moment, not as part of the past. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Title from disc label.

Compact disc.

Produced by Mike Albanese and the Bad Ends.

The Bad Ends (Mike Mantione, vocals, guitar ; Billy Berry, drums, percussion, guitars, electric sitar ; Dave Domizi, bass, backing vocals, cello, piano ; Christian Lopez, guitars, mandolin, banjo ; Geoff Melkonian, keyboards, piano, backing vocals, guitars, violin, viola, glockenspiel, accordian) ; with special guests.

Recorded at Espresso Machine, Athens, GA.

The power. Mile marker 29 -- All your friends are dying -- Left to be found -- Thanksgiving 1915 -- Ode to José. The glory. The ballad of Satan's bride -- Little black cloud -- Honestly -- New York murder suicide.

Powered by Koha