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Perpetual Motion Machine (album)
1993 studio album by 13 Engines From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Perpetual Motion Machine is an album by the Canadian band 13 Engines, released in 1993.[1][2] It was the band's fourth album, and the second one released by a major label.[3] The album's first single was "More".[4]
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Production
The album was produced by frontman John Critchley, with help from Glen Robinson.[5] It was recorded at Le Studio, in Morin-Heights, Quebec.[6] Compared to sessions for their previous albums, the band spent a longer period of time in the studio, exploring overdubbing and trying different mixes.[5] The cellist Anne Bourne contributed to the album.[7] "Saviour" is about the Second Coming.[8]
Critical reception
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Trouser Press wrote that "the unpretentiously arty album lacked only a marketing gimmick (or a transcendent single, although 'Smoke & Ashes' comes mighty close) to get 13 Engines onto the alt-hit parade."[12] Billboard also praised "Smoke & Ashes", calling it "the perfect two-minute rock song."[13] The Philadelphia Inquirer called the album "much-improved," writing that 13 Engines displayed a "willingness to adapt elements of grunge to their songwriting."[14] The State considered the album "a 14-track trip through the subtlety and simplicity that was once rock 'n' roll."[11]
The Washington Post deemed the album "unadorned folk-rock that suggests, without slavishly imitating, Neil Young and Crazy Horse."[15] The Calgary Herald thought that "ambiguous lyrics are delivered in a Morrison monotone style and then sung in wavering half-whispers, buoyed by guitars that slide from grungy psychedelia to hard-rock backbeats."[10] The Edmonton Journal chose Perpetual Motion Machine as the fourth best Canadian album of 1993, describing it as "energetic, original guitar rock with sneaky hooks and sometimes confusing lyrics."[16]
AllMusic called Perpetual Motion Machine "a record that, while perhaps a bit cleaner sonically than their debut, finds the band still creating a glorious racket."[9]
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Track listing
References
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