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Saint Etienne - Good Humor/Fairfax High

Good Humor/Fairfax High
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Album Details: Good Humor/Fairfax High

Release Date:01/01/1998
UPC:

Track List: Good Humor/Fairfax High

Disk 1

  1. Split Screen
  2. Bad Photographer
  1. Erica America
  2. Dutch TV

Disk 2

  1. Hit the Brakes
  2. Madeleine
  3. Swim Swan Swim
  4. Clark Co. Record Fair
  1. My Name Is Vlaovic
  2. Afraid to Go Home
  3. Cat Nap

Pro Reviews: Good Humor/Fairfax High

  • All Music Guide

    Sub Pop released Saint Etienne's 1998 album Good Humor in a limited version that included a bonus disc of extras. Entitled Fairfax High, the 40-minute disc of B-sides and assorted extras enabled the trio to ransack their sock drawer yet again. Most of these stray tracks come from the Sylvie and Bad Photographer singles. Like their other collections of studio fallout, this disc offers a few hidden gems and a clutch of decent-but-not-so-hot moments. Opening with the instrumental Mike Post homage, "Hill Street Connection" (originally named "Andrew McCarthy" after the Less Than Zero star) and ending with the easy listening instrumental "Cat Nap," it feels like more of a decent album than a hodgepodge, if slightly uneven. The raw and snappy "Hit the Brakes" is spectacular, quite possibly displaying what Diana Ross and the Supremes would have sounded like if they had recorded for Stax instead of Motown. "Zipcode" is an oddity that ends up working well as something that could have stood favor...ably on Good Humor. It contains a chorus that makes a fair amount of sense, but the verses seem like random phrases that fit only through enunciation. The chorus criticizes a friend or lover, but one of the verses speaks of a non-stereo watch/radio that packs a hearty yield. Another verse of the song: "I never cried when Elvis died/Told you I did, but hey, I lied." Other notables include soundtrack fodder like "My Name Is Vlaovic" and the light acoustic folk of "Madeleine." Good Humor isn't an absolute must-have in this version, but it's definitely preferable to the single-disc version and is well worth seeking out. - Andy Kellman, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Saint Etienne

Like most bands formed by former music journalists, Saint Etienne were a highly conceptual group. The trio's concept was to fuse the British pop sounds of '60s London with the club/dance rhythms and productions that defined the postacid house England of the early '90s. Led by songwriters Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs, and fronted by vocalist Sarah Cracknell, the group mana... Read more