Anodyne | 
enlarge | Artist: Uncle Tupelo Label: Rhino / Wea Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $12.47 You Save: $6.51 (34%)
New (18) Used (7) from $4.64
Rating: 58 reviews Sales Rank: 23230
Format: Live, Original Recording Reissued, Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.3 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 73832 UPC: 812273832208 EAN: 0081227383220 ASIN: B00008DCSZ
Release Date: March 11, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Slate | | • | Acuff-Rose | | • | The Long Cut | | • | Give Me Back the Key to My Heart | | • | Chickamauga | | • | New Madrid | | • | Anodyne | | • | We've Been Had | | • | Fifteen Keys | | • | High Water | | • | No Sense in Lovin' | | • | Steal the Crumbs | | • | Stay True (bonus track, previously unreleased) | | • | Wherever (bonus track, previously unreleased) | | • | Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way (bonus track, previously unreleased) | | • | Truck Drivin' Man (bonus track, live) | | • | Suzy Q (bonus track, live) |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential recording Before Anodyne, Uncle Tupelo already had one masterpiece in 1991's noisy and tense Still Feel Gone, but this album, the band's major-label debut, had even grander ambitions. Replacing the group's grungy guitar with soaring lap and pedal-steel fills, plus fiddle and mandolin breaks both sweet and raucous, Anodyne is overflowing with a spacious grandeur that alludes to, and then makes it own, everything from the Band and the Stones and Neil Young (both as a solo artist and with Crazy Horse) to old Acuff-Rose songs--all of which is just to say that it's among the best roots-rock records ever made. The 2003 remastered and expanded edition offers three unreleased tracks from the original sessions plus a pair of live covers from a 1993 Chicago show. --David Cantwell
Album Description Expanded & remastered reissue of 1993 album includes five bonus tracks, 'Stay True' (prev. unissued), 'Wherever' (prev. unissued), 'Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way?' (prev. unissued), 'Truck Drivin' Man' (live), & 'Suzy Q' (live). Digipak. Sire/Rhino. 2003.
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| Customer Reviews:
does not live up to the praise. June 3, 2008 dbnvenilfnelknrfghrg 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
2.50 out of 5 stars. Lyrics look good on paper but, are hurt by a solid mediocre voice with a faux southern accent I could do without. The vocals could have been more like the familiar Indie-hipster-rock-nasal-geek-Muppet voices used so often in groups The lyrics and music often sound like a Yankees' interpretation of a music he (they) never really knew by not living in The South. The players know their instruments and the cliches and play them as if learned in a class. I really don't get the punk influence I heard of much. They do often sound Indie-rock. I also have not responded well to Gram Parsons. After hearing artists like Emmylou Harris, who turned out an incredible rock/country LP "The Wrecking Ball", and possibly the real first alt-country artist, Mickey Newbury, who used a large palate of beautiful compositions on par with The Beatles, it's hard to be impressed by the "Alt" of Tupelo or Gram. I also like Lyle Lovett more than those "innovators". The two albums I checked out are "Anthology" and "Anodyne", Anthology being difficult to get through twice. The 3rd attempt was played as a background to sitting on the back porch but, my wife made me turn it off half way through track 2! I can't get beyond the fake accent and the overly "sittin'-on-the-front-porch" feel to nearly every song. Pat your hands softly and sip a PBR. There is not enough oomph to any of the tracks and just not any staying power for me, save the stale cliche of a song overstated and over.... The last half of "Anodyne" felt glummer. I have to say that at most was a little more pure. Still, it does not have the emotional impact or beauty of a fairly comparable artist, Mark Kozelek, also of the beloved Red House Painters.
Good Album, But Doesn't Quite Meet My Lofty Expectations February 13, 2007 Writing in Washington (Washington, D.C.) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I discovered Son Volt and Wilco in the last year or so and really love both of them. My appreciation for the two spinoff groups led me to Uncle Tupelo, and everything I read said Anodyne was THE Uncle Tupelo album -- so I was excited to get it. Anodyne is a really solid album; it's very easy to listen to the whole thing and there are no bad songs. But it didn't quite match up to the high (probably unreasonable) expectations I had for it. The album is a little more country-ish/less alt-ish than I had hoped and I don't find it quite as interesting as some of the Wilco/Son Volt albums. But I'm clearly biased by my perspective. I came to this album backwards and I'm not a huge country fan. Still, I recommend Anodyne for anyone who loves their alt country with a little more country. And I think it's the type of album that will really grow on listerners after a paying it a half-dozen or so times.
A cure for all depression October 10, 2005 Mike Smith (Albuquerque, NM) 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Depending on what dictionary you use, you'll find different defintions for the word "anodyne." One says "anodyne" means "a cure for all depression." Another says it means "soothing, calming." Another: "a medicine that relieves pain." It can be a noun, or an adjective. In all these definitions, it fits this album perfectly. This, Uncle Tupelo's last (and best) album together, "Anodyne," will cure those depressed by a lack of beautiful music, it will soothe and calm those who have wasted their time on music less melodious and less mournful, and will relieve the pain of those who have their hearts broken with no one to tell their sorrows to. This album is full of songs of struggle and longing, hopefulness and the feeling of being betrayed, acceptance and resignation. The cover version of "Give Back the Key to My Heart" will lodge itself in your brain for weeks. "New Madrid" with its banjoish, country road, "Driving on 9" type of feel will make you rush to your car keys and out the door, slamming the screen door behind you. And "No Sense In Lovin'," with its lilting steel guitar and walloping lyrics will reaffirm your suspicion that Jeff Tweedy is among the greatest songwriters of all time. (It has to be Uncle Tupelo's best song.) "There's no sense in lovin' Anyone Who hates themself." This is the last album of a great band full of great musicians. Listening to it, one is filled simultaneously with the sadness that this band may never play together again and a joyful knowledge of the great music that both of this band's main songwriters (Jeff Tweedy of Wilco and Jay Farrar of Son Volt) would go on to write on their own. I love this album. (My daughter's NAME is Anodyne. Seriously.) You can listen to this album when you're happy, or when you're sad, and they'll be something in it for you no matter what. It's alt.country at its best. It's MUSIC at its best. It's GREAT.
Looks Brand New! September 17, 2005 Bernard A. Wolf (Denver, CO) 1 out of 10 found this review helpful
The item arrived promptly and in better condition than promised. THANK YOU!
The essence of the 90s alt-country movement July 16, 2005 Eric W. Metheny (God's country) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Anodyne catches Uncle Tupelo at their zenith. At that moment when a band realizes their potential just before the wheels come off. Each of these songs have much too offer. "Acuff-Rose", "We've Been Had", the Doug Sahm cover "Give Back the Key to My Heart" are the highlights of a cd full of gems. Buy this record, turn it to 11, pour a glass of bourbon of your choice, and become a part of the greatest American alt-country band doing what they do best.
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