{"product_id":"superseeder","title":"Superseeder","description":"\"Another year, another album\" yawn the liner notes of 1995's Superseeder, a hint that perhaps Nick Saloman was growing tired of the Bevis Frond's work schedule. There's little hint of that on the album itself, though; from the spiraling, Eastern-influenced opener \"Superceded\" onwards, this is one of the Bevis Frond's strongest collections. Recorded with the rhythm section of Adrian Shaw and Andy Ward (guest Bari Watts adds a second lead guitar to two tracks, most notably the wild \"I Can't Cry\"), Superseeder marks a temporary return to the sort of extended raga-like acid rock workout that typified early Bevis Frond releases; the difference is that with a proper rhythm section pushing things along instead of Saloman overdubbing himself on various instruments, there's a much greater sense of interplay on tracks like the nearly 17-minute workout \"House of Mountains.\" The album's high point is the hilarious \"Sue Me,\" with Saloman singing mocking lines about being \"the most psychedelic-est of them all\" to a backing track that could fit on Electric Ladyland. The garage-punky \"Dolly Bug,\" one of Saloman's most concise pop songs, is another goody, but really, the whole album is excellent. ~ Stewart Mason","brand":"InnerSleeve","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":42079326142629,"sku":"809236144911","price":32.0,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0612\/6007\/1077\/files\/16a54675856f5acd8fb8a61d5fadfdb4.jpg?v=1777708253","url":"https:\/\/www.innersleeve.com\/en-gb\/products\/superseeder","provider":"InnerSleeve","version":"1.0","type":"link"}