Disc: 1
1. Birds Of Prey
2. Let Me Get Your Coat
3. Hurricane Judy
4. Drugstore Bust
5. This Is Really A Book
6. You Will Be Loved
7. Quicksilver
8. Where'S My Drink / Holy Janet Comes On Waves
9. Wake Up And Live
10. Our Time
Disc: 2
1. Quicksilver 2
2. Get Your Boots On
3. Build Havana
4. Dr. No
5. Back Seat Silver Jet Sighter
6. Malice
7. The Great Escape
8. Letters To Juniors
9. Altitude
10. Cowboy Weather
Editorial Review from Amazon.com
Robert Harrison, the creative force behind Future Clouds & Radar, set an ambitious
goal for himself and his musical cohorts: to create a double album that sustained
itself in every regard from beginning to end. Having suffered a serious spinal
injury five years ago, he was confined to his bed for a couple of years as he
slowly recovered. The 27 songs he brought to his band are not so much a portrait
of a man on the mend as a look at the emotional and creative forces that whirl
through an active mind in a still body. While the utter sprawl of pop smarts,
riveting hooks, mesmerizing arrangements, and alluring lyrics bring forth comparisons
to Robert Pollard, there's greater sonic variety (including judiciously deployed
horns at crucial junctures) and painstakingly finessed production decisions.
The songs call out for attention on first play; subsequent listens yield a world
of subtle nuances and surprises. Harrison met his goal: file this next to the
White Album.
--David Greenberger
CD Description
Heavily influenced by cameras, the asterisk, loss of any kind, and Bill
Monroe's falsetto, Future Clouds And Radar is the latest creation of
Robert Harrison, best known as the leader of Austin cult-reggae-heroes
Cotton Mather; hailed by NME as "the most exciting new guitar pop band
since Supergrass", handpicked by
Oasis to join them on tour, and most recently, featured on Little Steven
Van Zandt's "Coolest Songs In The World Vol. 1". Paste Magazine hails
this record as a "magnificent double-disc collection of Flaming Lips/13th
Floor Elevators/ELO-inspired psychedelic pop gems. Move over, Robert
Pollard."