Lemonheads: It's A Shame About Ray Collector's Edition

News   2024-11-07 03:36:38

1992's It's A Shame About Ray is widely accepted as

Lemonheads' finest half-hour, bridging the gap between Evan Dando's more

shambolic, punk-influenced days and the half-assing that came after it. Sixteen

years later, it sounds slightly dated but no less sunny and terrific—the

jangly guitars define Alternative Nation's best days, when indie-rock, such as it

was, could still safely flirt with the mainstream. "Confetti" and "It's A Shame

About Ray" could find a home on the radio in any decade since, and the quiet

strum of "My Drug Buddy" and especially "Hannah & Gabi" offer concrete

proof that Dando was so much more than just a pretty face. Ray still feels classic,

front to back, and that includes the star-making, tacked-on cover of "Mrs.

Robinson."

This collector's-edition reissue adds a bunch of

tracks that sound promising on paper, but don't really deliver. Demo versions

of nine Ray

songs offer an intimate look but ultimately reveal nothing; this set would've been

far better served by some of the many Lemonheads B-sides, or even a

better-recorded acoustic set, where Dando generally delivers. The accompanying

DVD offers a straight reissue of the previously VHS-only Two Weeks In

Australia,

which gathers music videos ("It's A Shame About Ray" stars Johnny Depp) and

some live clips. It's far from essential, but still fun—especially if you

want to see the man who defined dreamy in the 120 Minutes era wearing jean shorts.

Bonus Material: C

Excellent News recommendation
Popular News
Artists
Songs
News