Glad to Get Away

Glad To Get Away
Studio album by Jandek
Released 1994
Recorded Unknown
Genre Folk music/ Blues / Outsider Music
Length 41:28
Label Corwood Industries
Producer Corwood Industries
Jandek chronology
Graven Image (album)
(1994)
Glad To Get Away
(1994)
White Box Requiem
(1996)

Glad to Get Away is the twenty-fourth album by Jandek, and was released (1994) as Corwood Industries#0762. It continues the acoustic sound of the prior two albums.

Contents

Track listing

  1. Bitter Tale – 2:25
  2. Hey Mister Can You Tell Me – 3:33
  3. Ezekiel – 2:49
  4. Moon Dance – 2:22
  5. Flowers on My Shirt – 2:36
  6. Morning Drum – 2:58
  7. Down Clown – 2:45
  8. Rain in Madison – 2:19
  9. Van Ness Mission – 3:03
  10. Anticipation – 3:12
  11. Nancy Knows – 3:10
  12. Take My Will – 4:03
  13. Plenty – 2:00
  14. What – 3:06

Album cover description

Almost identical to Graven Image. It looks like he stepped about ten feet to one side -- you're looking down the driveway along the side of the house, instead of just at the back of the house -- and took another photo. -- Seth Tisue

Part of this album cover would be incorporated into both the trailer and the DVD cover of the documentary Jandek on Corwood.

Reviews

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Sixteen years after his first album, Jandek sounds more confident in his playing, and his vocals are more up front, but his detuned/untuned acoustic guitar and depressed, stream-of-consciousness folk/blues songs remain at the core of his music... 'Rain in Madison' jumps out, a cracked blues-style story about... something ('you know you can't bring no electric devices out in the rain'). On 'Van Ness Mission', he turns up the echo full blast for a disturbing 'delic journey that continues on 'Anticipation' like a free-style Tav Falco goin' down slow. 'Nancy Knows' is an awkward but complex instrumental that clearly shows Jandek now moving his left hand around the neck of his guitar in a way very foreign to his early open-strum approach. I wonder if the tune is named for the same Nancy who sang on chair beside a window back in '82. 'Take My Will' is more early blues, Jandek-style... He pulls out his harmonica for a little dylan-squeal accompaniment on 'Plenty'. The cycles of nature are not often rapid; listen as one of nature’s strangest wonders continues to slowly 'progress'. -- Piero Scaruffi -- The History of Rock Music #4

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