Shopping > Music > Jack Frost > Snow Job

Jack Frost - Snow Job (CD)

Snow Job
Pricing Not Available
Not Yet Rated 0 Ratings (0 Reviews)

Album Details: Snow Job

Release Date:08/07/1996
Label:Beggars Banquet
UPC:607618018320

Pro Reviews: Snow Job

  • All Music Guide

    Six years on from the original Jack Frost effort, the duo returned, this time with new Church drummer Tim Powles providing the beats and Kilbey's brother Russell contributing bits here and there, with the equally satisfying Snow Job. The basic principle of the first album carried through here -- songs which don't quite fit the mold of either musician's work, solo or in a group, and which feature regular vocal collaboration or exchanges on most tracks. That said, there's a definite Church edge on numerous tracks in particular, possibly due to Powles' involvement, but at base just in the way songs like "Aviatrix" are sung and performed, Kilbey's sense of soft vocal drama and lyrical images and subtly epic, psych-inspired music fully to the fore. If McLennan doesn't always seem as prominent this time out, he definitely has his moments, such as with the grand "Angela Carter." The dramatic recitation/semi-rap (at least in a '60s Dylan sense) he gives on "Shakedown," filtered through a bit o...f production murk, adds to the claustrophobic, blasting strut of the music, making it a brief but worthy highlight. For the most part, Snow Job concentrates on moody, mysterious songs shot through with sudden musical flourishes -- buried electric guitar leads and drones, choruses that step forward from the songs, heavier crunch kicking in for emphasis (with a good example of the latter quality on "Empire," which oddly enough sounds a touch inspired by the Smashing Pumpkins' "Thirty-Three"). Sometimes there's a bit more direct rock bite -- "Cousin/Angel" offsets calmer verses with a more full-bodied chorus, while "Pony Express" swings with a bit of glammy kick tempered by the calmer vocals. If there's a hands-down standout, the fragile, pretty waltz "Weightless and Wild" is it, easily a rival to the best Church songs in the same vein and, when the electric guitars fully kick in, simply rapturous. - Ned Raggett, All Music Guide Read more Less

Rate & Write a Review: Snow Job

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Snow Job

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Jack Frost

Jack Frost was a side project uniting the Australian singers and songwriters Steve Kilbey (best known as the frontman of the Church) and Grant McLennan (late of the GoBetweens). The duo's selftitled debut appeared in 1991, at which point both men both returned to their primary projects; however, in 1995, Jack Frost reconvened for the LP Snow Job, this time along with Ch... Read more