Game
Theory
Lolita
Nation
Omnivore
Recordings
One
of the greatest albums ever made, and a true lost classic. I don’t want to
belabor the comparison, but the only album Lolita Nation can be compared to is
Sgt. Pepper. If that album had been made in 1987, with all the advances in
recording studio technology, it might have sounded like Lolita Nation.
From
the first piece of music, the sound collage “Kenneth, What’s The Frequency?”
comes words to live by: “You can pick the game, you can, when you know what it
is you’re doing. But when you know what it is you’re doing, then you despise
it.” More proof that Scott Miller, and yes, all of Game Theory, were geniuses.
Because after that opening, a headspinning, yet very sensible album goes forth,
influenced by James Joyce, TS Elliot, and the band’s own pop sense, making for
wondrous moments in every song on the album. And also for the sound collages,
including one with a title in computer code, that is just tremendous.
The
newly added second disk is outtakes, rarities, demos, and live versions of
selections from Lolita Nation, a disk that can stand on its own, but that also
succeeds in making Lolita Nation essential for not only fans, but anyone who is
curious about college rock at its peak.
For
me it means even more than that. When I first bought the tape of this album in
1987, I sat down with it, wrote out what I thought the songs were about, and
while I was wrong about their meanings, I did have a plot for a novel. So yes,
I found I could write. Which is one of the things I love most of all about this
album.
Maybe
you will love this album too.
Andrea Weiss
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