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This is the debut effort by Glenn Kotche, Jim O'Rourke and Jef Tweedy, collectively known as Loose Fur. a must have for fans of quirky pop-rock. Review: Great Music - This is a great album I am not sure how I could consider myself a Wilco fan and not know about loose fur Review: Four Stars - We like this as it is not your typical Wilco/Tweedy album.













| ASIN | B00007L9NJ |
| Best Sellers Rank | #178,957 in CDs & Vinyl ( See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl ) #3,766 in Folk Rock (CDs & Vinyl) #17,013 in Alternative Rock (CDs & Vinyl) #75,185 in Pop (CDs & Vinyl) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (43) |
| Date First Available | January 20, 2007 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Label | Drag City |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer | Drag City |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Original Release Date | 2003 |
| Product Dimensions | 5.4 x 5.12 x 0.4 inches; 3.36 ounces |
P**G
Great Music
This is a great album I am not sure how I could consider myself a Wilco fan and not know about loose fur
A**R
Four Stars
We like this as it is not your typical Wilco/Tweedy album.
T**7
Great music
This is a great album. Creative and different. I also suggest the recent Postal Service
M**H
The lost Wilco album
The vocals, songwriting, and guitar of Jeff Tweedy. The drums and percussion of Glen Kotche. And the vocals, guitar, and songwriting of Jim O'Rourke. That should be review enough. That should tell you: buy this! If it's not, let me just tell you that if you're a Wilco fan, you've heard Loose Fur before. On "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot." On that Wilco album there's a moment in--I believe it's the song "Poor Places," where Wilco becomes Loose Fur. Jeff Tweedy and Glen Kotche are in both bands, and Jim O'Rourke has produced (and contributed to) two Wilco albums, and it just happened that way. And, not to insult any other members of Wilco (John, you rock!), but sometimes that three's all you need. This is a stripped down, more experimental Wilco, with a hearty dose of Jim O'Rourke thrown in. Its jams are about as good as "Spiders (Kidsmoke)" on Wilco's "A Ghost is Born" album, its lyrics are heartfelt and unique ("You were wrong to believe...in me," "If I said I loved you, I was talking to myself.), and it is always interesting and fun to listen to. The songs include a word-sample from Wilco's "Heavy Metal Drummer," a long shambling chain of lalalalala's reminscent of Bob Dylan's "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" soundtrack, wild mercury drums that sound as if Kotche just threw his sticks into a clothesdryer and recorded them, and some excellent experimental noise rock. I highly recommend this to any Wilco fans that were with it enough to make the transition with Wilco from "Summerteeth" to "Yankee Hotel" and from "Yankee Hotel" to "A Ghost is Born." This may take a few listens to get used to, but you may discover it's a classic. I know I did.
D**B
i play this all the time
okay..im a fussy bugger..most so called great bands of the last 30 years, simply bore me stupid...but wilco are the one exception,i love all their albums in a major way..the same way i love dylan and neil young..i also highy recommend most of the jim orourke albums..insignificence and eureka and bad timing are lost masterpeices..but The LOOSE FUR album is simply a total masterpeice..in 20 years it will be one of those BURIED TREASURES, that magazines like mojo will be writing about..as great as yankee foxtrot..and some of tweedy,s best songs...buy this reocrd
G**T
What Would Loose Fur Do?
For the record, this is not like Pink Floyd's Meddle, neither sonically nor in quality. This short album of 6 songs has its moments. There are some very good jams here. Yet there is present a deconstruction of music that has become part of the reorganized Wilco. This record feels like a it's a blood relative to "A Ghost is Born." "Chinese Apple" and "You Were Wrong" are very good songs. "Laminated Cat" and the instrumental "Liquidation Totale" are challenging songs that grow on you with repeated listening. The former has no real chorus and the latter's percusion-challenged rhythm does a musical freefall towards the end that is taxing to listen to. The Jim O'Rourke sung "Elegant Transaction" has yet to grow on me and "So Long" is a Tweedy/O'Rourke experiment that has some appeal despite the drop-the-silverware percussion. "Chinese Apple" is also noteworthy because it contains some of the same lyrics as "Heavy Metal Drumer" (from YHF.) Listen to this one before you buy. I give it three stars because it is too short and too experimental to pay the asking price new.
H**S
The genesis seed for YHF
Maybe calling Loose Fur a supergroup is a bit reaching, especially since none of its participants, aside from maybe Jeff Tweedy, has actually helmed a major act in the traditional sense. In other words, Traveling Wilburys this ain't...which is probably a good thing, if truth be known. Yet like the Wilburys, there is a casual nay "loose" quality to the six songs on this album that are nothing if not charming and well arranged, with the three Tweedy sung compositions being the highlights. What's more intriguing about this album is in hearing the stylistic seeds of what would become Wilco's Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. As such, a song on the Loose Fur debut like "Laminated Cat" hails from an earlier YHF outtake called "Not For The Season," and while the Loose Fur debut was released in 2003, it was recorded in the summer of 2000 and, in fact, corresponds somewhat with the YHF sessions; to the point that both Jim O'Rourke and Glenn Kotche from the Loose Fur trio would end up replacing members of Wilco, with O'Rourke taking on a significant role as co-producer of YHF. Adding to the cross-pollenation, as producer and remixer, O'Rourke removed many of the previous contributions of other Wilco members so that several YHF songs would only feature the music of Tweedy, Kotche, and himself, i.e. Loose Fur. All in all, though, this album stands on its own. Fun, interesting, and well worth the price of admission. But for those who hanker for the wonder that is Yankee Hotel Foxtrot, this album stands as both a precursory and taster for what was already cooking in Jeff Tweedy's brain in the warmer months of 2000.
A**R
The only standout track, to me, is You Were Wrong. But I love that song
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