Dredg / The Pariah, the Parrot, the Delusion
Artist Dredg
Album Title: The Pariah, the Parrot, the Delusion
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Alternative & Punk: General Alternative
Format CD
Released 06/09/2009
Label Ohlone Recordings
Catalog No 518755
Bar Code No 0 75597 98261 9
Packaging Digipack
Tracks
1. Pariah (4:07)
2. Drunk Slide (1:27)
3. Ireland (3:41)
4. Stamp of Origin: Pessimistic (0:50)
5. Light Switch (3:30)
6. Gathering Pebbles (4:59)
7. Information (5:45)
8. Stamp of Origin: Ocean Meets Bay (0:30)
9. Savior (3:56)
10. R U O K? (2:12)
11. I Don't Know (3:44)
12. Mourning This Morning (5:41)
13. Stamp of Origin: Take a Look Around (0:58)
14. Long Days and Vague Clues (1:52)
15. Cartoon Showroom (4:18)
16. Quotes (6:04)
17. Down to the Cellar (3:40)
18. Stamp of Origin: Horizon (2:20)
Date Acquired 07/18/2009
Personal Rating
Acquired from Electric Fetus - Duluth
Purchase Price 13.49

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by James Christopher Monger
In just four albums, California's Dredg have run the gamut from atonal, angular alternative metal outfit to epic, unpredictable progressive rockers with one foot in "loud/quiet/loud" world of emo and the other in genre-defying abyss of art rock. Pariah, The Parrot, The Delusion represents the best of both worlds, employing top-notch musicianship, meticulous production, and memorable melodies atop an ambitious narrative culled from (in part) a Salman Rushdie essay called "Imagine There's No Heaven: A Letter to the 6 Billionth Citizen." While weeding through the wreckage of science, sociology, and religion for the quivering individual may seem like heavily guarded Radiohead territory, Dredg pulls it off with the human heart still intact. At 18 tracks, it can be a lot to swallow, but keep in mind that many of these are transitional pieces and rarely overstay their welcome. Obvious singles like "I Don't Know," "Saviour," and "Pariah" may be "modern rock" radio-ready, but they're "mathy" enough for the tech-loving music geeks, highbrow enough for the progressive rock elitists, and emotional enough for bike riding indie rockers.
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