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I Am Not Afraid of You and I Will Beat Your Ass

I Am Not Afraid of You and I Will Beat Your Ass

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Artist: Yo La Tengo
Label: Matador Records
Category: Music

List Price: $11.98
Buy New: $7.92
You Save: $4.06 (34%)

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Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 33 reviews
Sales Rank: 6808

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 10692
UPC: 744861069225
EAN: 0744861069225
ASIN: B000GUK0HM

Release Date: September 12, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Pass The Hatchet, I Think I'm Goodkind
  • Beanbag Chair
  • I Feel Like Going Home
  • Mr. Tough
  • Black Flowers
  • The Race Is On Again
  • The Room Got Heavy
  • Sometimes I Don't Get You
  • Daphnia
  • I Should Have Known Better
  • Watch Out For Me Ronnie
  • The Weakest Part
  • Song For Mahila
  • Point And Shoot
  • The Story Of Yo La Tengo

Similar Items:

  • Wincing the Night Away
  • The Crane Wife
  • Return to Cookie Mountain (with Bonus Tracks)
  • I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One
  • We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
It's no surprise that a group named after something said during a baseball game would title an album after something said during a basketball match. It is a bit of a surprise that this band remains so incredibly good, and capable of surprising even longtime listeners. This one's so diverse and such a mixture of different styles, it's reminiscent of the group's all-request on-air shows they play annually to support New Jersey-based radio station WFMU. Book-ended by two long, droney tunes, you've got garage-rock rave-ups, country-pop, horn-driven R&B, little gorgeous atmospheric songs, some brilliant falsetto singing, and... this list could go on and on. Who else would think to pair conga-style percussion to a Suicide-esque synth drone? Or even to work with longtime Dylan collaborator and strings arranger and violinist David Mansfield and have genius illustrator Gary Panter do the artwork at the same time? It's the little things that matter, especially when you mastered the big ones twenty-plus years ago. --Mike McGonigal

Amazon.com
This bold, eclectic, 80-minute album is the pinnacle of the band's twenty-year career. From eleven-minute guitar jams to gorgeous ballads to winsome horn-drenched pop songs, this album is all over the map, in a very good way. Features the talents of longtime Nashville producer Roger Moutenot, violinist Dave Mansfield of Dylan's Rolling Thunder Review, and the jacket artistry of Gary Panter (Raw, Jimbo).

More from Yo La Tengo


I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One


Painful


And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out


Fakebook


Electr-O-Pura


Prisoners of Love (Double Disc Anthology)




Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Lush, diverse, and stunningly well put together.   October 17, 2008
Michael Stack (North Chelmsford, MA USA)
Looking at Yo La Tengo's previous couple records to this one, while they were critically acclaimed and generally well received by audiences, I found the records lacking something and it seemed the band was getting mature (and by mature, I mean old). Thankfully, "I Am Not Afraid of You and I Will Beat Your A**" showed up to remind us that mature doesn't have to mean old.

What's been missing from the band's records has been a good dose of noise and distortion, and this record starts right up with a nearly eleven minute excursion into that territory-- opener "Pass the Hatchet, I Think I'm Goodkind" blazes in with a fierce beat, an aggressive bass and a wave of feedback-driven lead guitar. That guitarist Ira Kaplan doesn't deliver his finest vocal (it sounds a bit forced to me) is a bit besides the point, the piece is a reminder that this is a band that knows how to cut loose.

Mind you, the opener is the exception rather than the rule, but it's really quite stunning what that little bit of energy can provide in framing the record. It also helps that the songwriting, arranging and production are all really top notch on the record, whether it's the bouncy pop songs that so dominate the album (the simply fantastic "Beanbag Chair", single "Mr. Tough"), Pet Sounds inspired instrumental "Daphnia", painful ballad "Black Flowers" (awash in deep brass and strings) or '60s style rocker "I Should Have Known Better". And while there's a couple duds here and there ("The Race is On Again", somewhat unintelligible "Watch Out For Me Ronnie"), for a nearly 80 minute album, this one's remarkably consistently good.

The record's not quite the masterpiece of I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One, but it's the best thing they've done in a while. Recommended.



3 out of 5 stars I don't understand the hype for this Record.   August 30, 2008
paulsubpopman
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'll start by saying that "Summer Sun" is my favorite record by these guys. This is not like that. Everyone goes on and on about this and I dont get it. The way that they start this disc just rubs me the wrong way going for this noodling repetitive song that just stinks. This couldve easily been widdled down to an e.p. WAY TOO LONG. Too much filer. Sorry for the dis but its the truth. Ill pass on this 1.


4 out of 5 stars Fun And Cool   June 1, 2008
Hiiamjanet (USA)
My first contact with this Band was seeing the album and buying it solely because of the title. When it came in I listened to it twice and enjoyed it very much. It's hard describe the style since it morphs while listening and their influences are varied. In general a fun and cool, refreshing album.


4 out of 5 stars Velvet Mayfield   May 3, 2008
M. Buisman (Amsterdam, NL)
If this is your first taste of Yo La Tengo be in for a surprise. You might think that this is just another Velvet Underground clone trying to make their own 'Sister Ray' in the opening track. But after those repetetive 11 minutes are over you find out there is more to it.

Sweet soul vocals in the style of Curtis Mayfield, even including a great horn part. There's some jazz, some darker stuff and some noisy songs that reminded me of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion and Sonic Youth.

A lot of emotions are addressed on this album. Boredom and repetition, homesickness but also happyness.

Good CD, not great, not their best, not the best album of 2007. But Good.



4 out of 5 stars Place Holder   November 22, 2007
Barrett (Washington, D.C. United States)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Yo La Tengo aren't one of the most popular rock bands in the world, just one of the finest and most consistent. Over 20-plus years of work, they have established absolute authority over the post-Velvets drone-rock genre, without aping the Velvets' portentous implacability. The Tengo come off instead as friendly, slightly shy, next-door-neighbor types who just happen to write insanely catchy, frequently very noisy songs in a cornucopia of rock and pop styles -- songs that, oddly, tend to get more engaging the longer they last. Just because they're so open-hearted for an indie rock band doesn't mean Yo La Tengo aren't talented as hell.

Their latest release comes with an ironic title (visually and aurally, neither husband-and-wife team Ira Kaplan and Georgia Hubley nor bassist James McNew are bullies) and is bookended with astonishing epic numbers. In between, things veer from essential to iffy. Possibly the greatest flaw here, though, is a largely absent sense of urgency. Even at their quietest, as on the rapturous marital diary "And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out" (2000), they've conveyed the sense that some gut-spilling was going on, however politely. Outside the two epics, a spooky instrumental, McNew's "Black Flowers" and some lovely cuts of Georgia's, their latest material settles for a pleasant rehash of old moves. That would be an accomplishment for many acts; for this one it's a mild disappointment.

Are Yo La Tengo (Spanish for "I've got it") still open-hearted? Possibly, but "I Am Not Afraid..." suggests that they aren't sharing any new details. That said, it's a much stronger album than 95 percent of what gets cranked out for our consumption, either by the music industry or by DIY rock acts. If it isn't the ideal starter kit for budding Yo La Tengo fans (that would be 1997's "I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One"), anyone who hears it first will want to hear more. As they should.


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