

THE SHINS 'CHUTES TOO NARROW' LP
LABEL: SUB POP
STREET DATE: N/A
VARIANT: BLACK VINYL LP
The Shinâs debut full-length, 2001âs Oh, Inverted World, was a stunner; resoundingly well-received and landing itself on numerous year-end best-of-lists. MOJO placed it at #14 of the year and commented, âThis quartet from Albuquerque, New Mexico captured our hearts this summer with their pristine pop perfection.â And, Seattleâs The Stranger went even further with, ââŠa referential, brilliant record which had better blow up, or the world has forgotten what pop music is all about.â As far as weâre concerned it did blow up â seems thereâs still some hope for the world and its conception of pop music. Since that first record, singer/songwriter/guitarist James Mercer and drummer Jesse Sandoval moved from Albuquerque to Portland, OR and bassist Neal Langford was replaced with Dave Hernandez (ex-Scared Of Chaka), who played bass on the stand-out track from the first record, âNew Slang.â Chutes Too Narrow, their heavily anticipated follow-up, was recorded in Jamesâ basement home studio, with later mixing assistance from Phil Ek (Built to Spill, Modest Mouse, David Cross, Les Savy Fav, etc.). And, with 10 songs, clocking in at just over 30 minutes, the new record is a brief yet entirely scintillating glimpse at chiming, reflective and perfectly skewed pop innovation.
Original: $25.00
-70%$25.00
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Description
LABEL: SUB POP
STREET DATE: N/A
VARIANT: BLACK VINYL LP
The Shinâs debut full-length, 2001âs Oh, Inverted World, was a stunner; resoundingly well-received and landing itself on numerous year-end best-of-lists. MOJO placed it at #14 of the year and commented, âThis quartet from Albuquerque, New Mexico captured our hearts this summer with their pristine pop perfection.â And, Seattleâs The Stranger went even further with, ââŠa referential, brilliant record which had better blow up, or the world has forgotten what pop music is all about.â As far as weâre concerned it did blow up â seems thereâs still some hope for the world and its conception of pop music. Since that first record, singer/songwriter/guitarist James Mercer and drummer Jesse Sandoval moved from Albuquerque to Portland, OR and bassist Neal Langford was replaced with Dave Hernandez (ex-Scared Of Chaka), who played bass on the stand-out track from the first record, âNew Slang.â Chutes Too Narrow, their heavily anticipated follow-up, was recorded in Jamesâ basement home studio, with later mixing assistance from Phil Ek (Built to Spill, Modest Mouse, David Cross, Les Savy Fav, etc.). And, with 10 songs, clocking in at just over 30 minutes, the new record is a brief yet entirely scintillating glimpse at chiming, reflective and perfectly skewed pop innovation.

















