This article needs additional citations for verification .(August 2020) |
Heaven Sent | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1997 | |||
Genre | Indie rock, punk, post-punk, experimental rock, lo-fi, alternative rock | |||
Length | 73:26 | |||
Label | Emperor Jones [1] | |||
Half Japanese chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [2] |
The Austin Chronicle | [3] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [4] |
Heaven Sent is an album by the post-punk group Half Japanese, released in 1997. [3]
The title track, over sixty minutes long, was a live recording for a radio broadcast on Radio 5 VPRO's De Avonden. The other nine tracks on the album are one-minute tracks.
The A.V. Club gave the album a mixed review, describing the title track as intermittently "kind of cute" but also "impossible to listen to in its entirety." [1] The Austin Chronicle called it "precisely the sort of ambitious, sprawling project that would send all but the most adventurous label honchos into cardiac arrest." [3]
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Heaven Sent" | 61:40 |
2. | "Good & True & Fine" | 1:07 |
3. | "A Fine Line" | 1:22 |
4. | "Outer Space" | 1:35 |
5. | "Well Worth While" | 1:23 |
6. | "Better Than No" | 1:11 |
7. | "Dynasty" | 1:25 |
8. | "Goldfish & The Trout" | 1:11 |
9. | "This Is Our Night" | 1:17 |
10. | "The Day We Met" | 1:15 |
Half Japanese is an American art punk band formed by brothers Jad and David Fair around 1975, sometime after the family's relocation to Uniontown, Maryland. Their original instrumentation included a small drum set, which they took turns playing; vocals; and an out-of-tune, distorted guitar. Both Fair brothers sang, although over time Jad moved into the frontman role. As of the last several releases since the 1990s, according to the album and CD credits, the band composes and plays the entirety of the music while Fair, eschewing his role as guitarist from earlier albums, plays almost no guitar but is responsible for the vocals and lyrics, which typically divide into either "love songs or monster songs." The band, still a vital "art punk" unit, has released six albums since 2014 with the same personnel that recorded Hot in 1993. Their last three releases, Why Not?, Invincible and Crazy Hearts have all received four-star reviews from the U.K. magazine, Record Collector, while New Yorker also praised the 2021 release, Crazy Hearts. The band members are John Sluggett (guitar), Gilles-Vincent Rieder (drums), Jason Willett (bass), Mick Hobbs (guitar), and Jad Fair.
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