Red Line | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 5, 2000 | |||
Studio | National Recording Studio | |||
Genre | Post-rock | |||
Length | 73:18 | |||
Label | Thrill Jockey [1] | |||
Trans Am chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [2] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [3] |
The Guardian | [4] |
Pitchfork | 8.7/10 [5] |
Red Line is the fifth album by Trans Am, released in 2000. [6] [7]
The album was recorded at the band's National Recording Studio. [8] The track "Let's Take The Fresh Step Together" uses a timestretched sample of the default Windows 98 startup sound. Ian Svenonius guests on "Ragged Agenda". [9]
Trouser Press called the album "a sprawling career summary of Trans Am’s myriad obsessions," writing that "the trio stretches out on ambient mood-pieces like the baffling 'Village in Bubbles' and the psychedelic, spacious noise of 'For Now and Forever'." [1] The New York Times wrote that the band "has finally embraced free-form rock with a beat rather than derivative kitsch." [10] SF Weekly thought that "overall the album is a success—dark at times, frenetic at others, but always covered in a sticky layer of garage-sale gunk." [11]
All songs written by Trans Am (Philip Manley, Nathan Means, Sebastian Thomson) unless noted:
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