Top Bar
Musique Machine Logo Home ButtonReviews ButtonArticles ButtonBand Specials ButtonAbout Us Button
SearchGo Down
Search for  
With search mode in section(s)
And sort the results by
show articles written by  
 Review archive:  # a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

Landed - How Little Will It Take [Load - 2009]

Believe it or not, the 90s wasn't the total end of the American underground music scene.  That is to say, it was gradual, but I do remember there were still many off-the-wall rock bands that weren't swept by commercialism. 

Many such bands played clubs like the Bug Jar in my city, and I remember the craziest ones came from Providence, Rhode Island.  The more well-known of these were Arab On Radar and Six Finger Satellite, amongst many others shunned by their own local scene but a big hit in Rochester, New York and other places disappointed in how bland 'alternative' was becoming, desperately searching for something a bit more primal...

One of the bands from the Providence scene that I saw was Landed.  I remember them setting up on the dancefloor instead of the stage, and the guitarist covering his face in his turtleneck like a character from the Bazooka Joe comic strip while he blindly attacked the strings of his instrument and thrashed across the room.

So this is a sprawling document on a 3" and 5" disc that includes all their past recorded output, unreleased stuff and a brand spanking new track that sounds a bit more metallish than I remember.  So what do they sound like?  Washington DC punk with some Birthday Party bedlam mixed in.  However, much of this doesn't really match having seen them live -- perhaps there should be a DVD to give you a sense of being there.  But the very last track on this collection ("Hit the Land", off their very first record) is the thing that's worth buying it for.  A jazz freakout with sax and optigan -- very odd combination but it works extremely well.

How Little Will It Take is a must-have for those who remember the REAL 90s music underground.  It's rarely has been bettered by any of today's rock bands, and I mean that.  Of course you know any group named after a song by Can has to be good, right?

Rating: 4 out of 5Rating: 4 out of 5Rating: 4 out of 5Rating: 4 out of 5Rating: 4 out of 5

Lawrence J. Patti
Latest Reviews

Landed - How Little Will It Take
Believe it or not, the 90s wasn't the total end of the American underground music scene.  That is to say, it was gradual, but I do remember there were s...
180424   Ulvtharm - 7 Uthras
180424   The Bad Shepherd - The Bad Sh...
180424   Impulse - Impulse( Blu Ray)
170424   Jan Jelinek - Social Engine...
170424   Carlos “Zíngaro”, Guilherme R...
160424   The Borderlands - The Borderl...
160424   Rien - The New Source Recording
160424   Worship - Thoughts
150424   Lion-Girl - Lion-Girl(Blu Ray)
150424   Waidelotte - Celestial Shrine
Latest Articles

The Music of Clay Ruby & Burial H...
Over the last couple of decades Wisconsin native, Clay Ruby has been creating some of the world’s finest dark electronic music under the Burial Hex mon...
280324   The Music of Clay Ruby & Buri...
290224   Sutcliffe No More - Normal Ev...
100124   Occlusion - The Operation Is...
181223   Best Of 2023 - Music, Sound &...
051223   Powerhouse Films - Of Magic, ...
181023   IO - Of Sound, Of Art, Of Exp...
210923   Lucky Cerruti - Of Not so Fri...
290823   The Residents - The Trouble W...
110723   Yotzeret Sheydim Interview - ...
250523   TenHornedBeast - Into The Dee...
Go Up
(c) Musique Machine 2001 -2023. Twenty two years of true independence!! Mail Us at questions=at=musiquemachine=dot=comBottom