not in uk and europe, where image is second to great songs. let Me Come Over was the breakthrough, but 3 A+ albums in a row, especially this one made it clear the states were more interested in garbage like Alice In Chains , Limp Biskit or the terrible Warped Tour crap. Sorry Pearl Jam, these guys were the real deal...and live, left it all on the stage. at least they were appreciated across the pond. The first two lps were great, but they really nailed it getting away from mascis producing--they became Buffalo Tom and not Dinosaur Jr Jr
Brilliant band, brilliant song. Their first couple of albums kept me going on long drives up and down the East Coast when I was touring in the late 90's.
there was no better place to be in your mid 20's high on dope n high on 90's music than in the 90's inNorth QLD Australia..the bestest memories...beautiful song
not many songs can actually convey an entire decade or a specific period of time like this song does. it just has that feeling working thru all the notes, chords and lyrics.
Wow I love the way you described it. I know exactly what youre saying. Theres a few songs from this time period that are hard-to listen to because the nostalgia overbearing
Such a great band. First two records were on my turntable for months at a time back in the day. Classic example of why radio has been a joke for decades. Just 1 of many great bands from the 80s and 90s who slipped thru the cracks. Grunge before grunge became a marketing term for selling a line of clothes.
Buffalo Tom got better after the early albums, starting with the masterpiece Let Me Come Over. They never looked back and are clearly a distinctive albeit grossly overlooked band (in their home country--they found the proper appreciation in the UK/Europe).
This is without a speck of doubt their best effort. There really isn't even a 'second place', really. Nothing. Thus, in a certain sense, they were a one-hit-wonder--sans the actual hit-status this track deserved, obviously
is that an awkward position for a pedal board? It seems like an awkward position for a pedal board. Chris is up there with Mike Mills as a backing vocalist.