Description: Toshack Highway Magnetic Morning CD is EX/NM. Sianspheric Aspirin Age CD has a minor surface scratch/scuff that does not affect play: EX. Bi-Fold Digipak has shelf wear: VG/VG+/. If you are interested in purchasing multiple items, please let me know. I can combine ship items so that there is only one USPS media mail charge. There should be a way to select combine shipping in your cart at checkout or to submit an invoice request. In the event that eBay forces checkout and does not allow an invoice request, I will issue a combined shipping refund immediately after your purchase. Thank You! Toshack Highway vs. SiansphericMagnetic Morning/Aspirin Age Review By Jon Garrett: "Adam Franklin, former front man and chief songwriter for Swervedriver, has spent his days since the band’s last album in 1998 involved in a constantly morphing project called Toshack Highway. Rather than replicate the lush, saturated feel of the Swervedriver recordings, Franklin has used the Toshack Highway to indulge both his electronic and folk muses. His lone full-length, 2000’s self-titled album, found Franklin exploring the former, as a supporting cast of musicians helped him add modern production touches and a more experimental flavor to his melodies. The two EPs he’s released since, including the one being reviewed here, have a decidedly more lo-tech feel. Swervedriver’s layered sheets of feedback are shelved in favor of simple, direct acoustic songs. This approach might be anathema to longtime Swervedriver enthusiasts, but those with patience will find much to like about Franklin’s earthy and warm arrangements. This is not to say that Franklin completely severs the ties with his other outfit. In fact, unlike many side or solo projects, Franklin has always referenced his previous work while under the guise of Toshack. In concert, he has been known to cover Swervedriver a-sides and b-sides. Meanwhile, on this EP, we are treated to a drastic revision of the last song on Swervedriver’s 99th Dream, “Behind the Scenes and Sounds of the Times” (here shortened to “The Sounds and the Times”). Franklin recasts the song as a Simon and Garfunkel-styled folk tune, with the melody delicately rendered on acoustic guitar as Franklin’s signature drawl does the rest. Toshack Highway is perhaps best described as an opportunity for Franklin to escape the rigid confines of the Swervedriver sound. He’s certainly shown a willingness to explore more atmospheric terrain under this moniker; however, Magnetic Morning is arguably the first to do so without compromising the songs’ strong rhythmic frameworks, an attribute that has always made Franklin’s compositions stand out when compared to others from similarly feedback-fixated artists. There’s nothing earth shattering here, but it’s certainly the most pleasant and engaging work in his post-Swervedriver catalogue. Magnetic Morning is devoid of the instrumental clutter that occasionally overwhelmed his full-length efforts. “The Streets That Spin Off”, a previously unreleased and refurbished song from the Swervedriver era, is an obvious highlight, with Franklin’s trademark swirling guitar lines making a welcome cameo. “(She’s Got) Celestial Navigation” temporarily puts a damper on the proceedings, if only because Franklin repeats the refrain “she sat on the wall” ad nauseum, but overall, Magnetic Morning is a smart, often liberating detour and a strong rebuttal to the argument that side projects are inherently inferior enterprises. If Magnetic Morning is the sound of Franklin expanding his sonic palette, then Aspirin Age represents the logical next step in Sianspheric’s steady metamorphosis, even if it’s not exactly a step forward. In many ways, Sianspheric are the direct descendants of the original shoegazers, so their inclusion on this EP makes perfect sense. Yet where Franklin and his contemporaries preferred to deliver their fuzzy melodies at bone-crushing volume, Sianspheric take a more relaxed and refined approach. They may lose some of the immediacy of their forebears, but they gain an intoxicating complexity. Songs like “Beneath the Ocean Floor” and “No Space” drift and dive with the grace of Sigur Ros while still maintaining the wavy drones that were the hallmarks of Ride and My Bloody Valentine. Granted, there’s nothing profound or particularly memorable on Aspirin Age, but it’s a surprisingly pleasant shoegazing retrospective that shows Sianspheric’s considerable strengths within their admittedly narrow limitations." Toshack Highway vs. Sianspheric – Magnetic Morning / Aspirin Age Label:Sonic Unyon – SUNCD080Format:2 x CD, EP, Split EPCountry:CanadaReleased: 2003Genre:RockStyle:Alternative Rock 1-1Toshack Highway–The Streets That Spin Off4:401-2Toshack Highway–Cannery Row 2:561-3Toshack Highway–Country Grass 4:351-4Toshack Highway–(She's Got) Celestial Navigation3:291-5Toshack Highway–The Sounds And The Times2:37 2-1Sianspheric–Song For 4:352-2Sianspheric–Beneath The Ocean Floor5:392-3Sianspheric–No Space3:102-4Sianspheric–This All Happened 5:042-5Sianspheric–Aspirin Age4:26
Price: 9.99 USD
Location: Melbourne, Florida
End Time: 2025-01-18T13:56:39.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.63 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: Toshack Highway, Sianspheric
CD Grading: Excellent (EX)
Composer: Adam Franklin
Record Label: Sonic Unyon
Release Title: Magnetic Morning/Aspirin Age
Case Type: Digipak
Case Condition: Very Good Plus (VG+)
Catalog Number: SUNCD080
Edition: First Edition, 2 x CD, EP, Split EP
Type: EP
Format: CD
Language: English
Producer: Adam Franklin, Sianspheric, Charlie Francis, Al Okada
Release Year: 2003
Era: 2000s
Style: 2000s, Indie, Indie Rock, Pop Rock, Space Rock, Shoegaze
Features: Digipak, Import, Original Cover, 2 x CD, EP, Split EP
Genre: Alternative, Rock
Country/Region of Manufacture: Canada