Ramp | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1991 | |||
Genre | Country rock | |||
Label | Amazing Black Sand | |||
Producer | Howe Gelb | |||
Giant Sand chronology | ||||
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Ramp is an album by the American band Giant Sand, released in 1991. [1] [2] The album was released via frontman Howe Gelb's Amazing Black Sand label, before being picked up by Restless Records. [3]
The majority of the album was produced by Gelb. [4] Victoria Williams contributed backing vocals to the album's second track, "Romance of Falling," the only track produced by Dusty Wakeman. [5] [6] Pappy Allen also makes an appearance on Ramp. [7] The album was recorded in Los Angeles and Tucson. [6]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [5] |
Robert Christgau | A− [8] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [9] |
MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide | [4] |
Spin Alternative Record Guide | 7/10 [10] |
Robert Christgau wrote: "The first side makes something of the dissociated atmospherics that undermined the band's previous umpteen releases; the second's almost popwise. Together they're what country-rock was never really like, or wanted to be." [8] Trouser Press thought that "Gelb seems to have found a way to propel himself at will into a deconstruction zone where boogie can mutate into pre-rock vocal harmony ('Warm Storm') and Sun Ra can be construed as a lounge lizard (the slurry 'Jazzer Snipe')." [11] The Austin American-Statesman deemed it "the kind of revelatory release that makes one want to search out everything the band has previously recorded." [12] LA Weekly likened the album to "Neil Young hallucinating punk rock... But this time out, the riffs are gentler, the harmonies sweeter." [13]
The Spin Alternative Record Guide opined that the band "has mastered the art of rambling within a loose structure." [10]
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Warm Storm" | |
2. | "Romance of Falling" | |
3. | "Wonder" | |
4. | "Welcome to My World" | |
5. | "Anti-Shadow" | |
6. | "Jazzer Snipe" | |
7. | "Z.Z. Quicker Foot" | |
8. | "Neon Filler" | |
9. | "Seldom Matters" | |
10. | "Resolver" | |
11. | "Nowhere" | |
12. | "Always Horses Coming" | |
13. | "Patsy's Blues" |
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