German Cars Vs American Homes

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
On a Stick (live version) 03:41 Tools
Get In My Car (karaoke) 01:56 Tools
Tagalong - instrumental (karaoke version!!!!) Will you be my friend? 04:58 Tools
Ritard Triangular 03:20 Tools
Serve Cold 01:56 Tools
Round of Applause 02:20 Tools
maiden america part 12 02:20 Tools
If I were the Czar of all Musicans... 06:24 Tools
Drive Uphill!!! 03:52 Tools
German Cars vs American Homes Bonus Beats 02:13 Tools
Andy and Miranda 02:26 Tools
God Save Us (Pope remix) 02:26 Tools
def beats 1 02:26 Tools
Party Nazi 02:26 Tools
Fireman 02:26 Tools
Tag Along 05:12 Tools
Tonight I Dream of the Vet 02:20 Tools
karaoke Dance of the Skeletons 02:20 Tools
James Call's Peter and the Wolf 57:58 Tools
at the Laundromat 57:58 Tools
Easy Target (one in a million) 03:26 Tools
Chinatown 03:40 Tools
Geometry (a cappella version) 01:11 Tools
Chastity... 03:40 Tools
Wash Up (11-30-06) 02:02 Tools
Angst (original James Call demo version) 05:59 Tools
tha Buket uv Sno (instrumental mix) 23:20 Tools
Angst (a cappella version) 04:02 Tools
On and On (karaoke version) 04:02 Tools
Help Me up (instrumental version) 04:02 Tools
God Save Us (Pope remix) 56:40 Tools
def beats 1 01:46 Tools
VACUUM (sing-a-long version) 03:52 Tools
The Drip 03:52 Tools
[the indigenious music of Polytranseurasia] 03:52 Tools
Big fun Maki Time (japanese dance track) 05:32 Tools
Party Nazi 20:00 Tools
Painting (accappella mix) 03:11 Tools
Demolition Commission 20:00 Tools
the Subunes 01:27 Tools
Fireman 06:40 Tools
Information (instrumental) 06:40 Tools
Big fun Maki Time (japanese dance track) 05:32 Tools
tha Buket uv Sno (instrumental mix) 56:40 Tools
Track 12 56:40 Tools
Playing Politics 56:40 Tools
Party Nazi 56:40 Tools
MicroscopeHead 04:08 Tools
Tagalong instrumental 04:08 Tools
I can't go for that 04:42 Tools
Waste of Time 04:42 Tools
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James Call must come first when assessing German Cars vs. American Homes, an indie-rock band that calls Greenwich Village home. Mr. Call is the lead singer, the show leader, the lyricist and the center of his own attention - a Jim Morrison / Weird Al hybrid with a manic sense of the struggle between art and social climbing. He has a bad haircut, two different kinds of epilepsy and a penchant for writing inscrutable lyrics. Since Mr. Call and his band’s level of seriousness is often indecipherable, GCvAM are not easily described. Sonically, they run the gamut from the herky-jerk of Devo to the careening funk of Fishbone, to the cosmic jazz stylings of the late Frank Zappa. And like Zappa or the Talking Heads, GCvAH mine their surroundings for the absurdities of social pretense, rearranging pop and youth culture into something that is both comical and angst-ridden. german cars vs American homes are sensitive artistes. The band even wears this mindset on the sleeve of their latest CD, One in a Million (Mishap) - their first full-length album after a series of EP’s. The cover is a faux scratch-’n’-win Lotto card that includes the directions: “Think you’re special? One in a million? GERMAN CARS VS. AMERICAN HOMES think otherwise.” Of the 16 songs on the album, about half have lyrics directed at an invisible “you,” a seeming extension of Mr. Call’s warped yet observant perceptions of his social constraints as a high-school outcast, a failing acting student, or a participant in the NYU pseudo-artist party scene in Williamsburg and downtown Manhattan. When he’s not railing against you, Mr. Call seems to be singing about himself. And on one track, “Vacuum” - a GCvAH staple that has appeared on two previous releases - the first and second-person references meet in Mr. Call’s listless world: “I read a classic book, / They say it’s worth a look, / I sing a pretty song, / I sing it all life long,” Mr. Call raps in his bored-art-student voice over synthesized Farfisa and bass sounds. “You think it’s vacuous, / It cleans up the mess, / I hear the TV’s on, / I’ve got my clothing on / V-A-C-U-U-M, / I’m in a vacuum, / You know you suck me up / V-A-C-U-U-M.” The soundtrack backing Mr. Call’s lyrical neuroses is appropriately off-kilter. GCvAH’s instrumentation is as unusual as the mix of characters who play the individual parts. The band’s bizarre rock sound is driven by two synth-itars--keyboard synthesizers with guitar-like headstocks that the band Devo made famous in the early 80’s--played by Mr. Call and Greg Travis, who’s a computer programmer by day. Behind them, acting student Peter Hale plays a standard rock drum kit alongside former thespian Holt Richardson, who trades beats on his electronic drum pads and cymbals. Mr. Richardson also occasionally sings lead with Mr. Call. Sanford Livingston and Phil Lojerfo--who recently left the band, changed his name to the Pluto Nash-like Sketch Jupiter and moved to Amsterdam--round out GCvAH on, respectively, bass/cello and guitar. (Spencer Chakedis, who produced One in a Million, has since taken Mr. Lojerfo’s place.) The resulting sound proves an ideal fit for Mr. Call’s disaffected lyrics, although it’s not exactly accessible. But like adolescent cigarette-smoking, once you get over the initial distaste, addiction’s just a few steps away--and hey, it’s the cool thing to do. -Ben Chace, New York Observer Takin from http://www.kickemwhiletheyredown.net/gcvah/press.shtml Added By nAte James Call has also performed a lot solo and is currently going back to his "more-electronic" roots with the Missing Teens project. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.