Dinosaur Jr.
You're Living All Over Me


5.0
classic

Review

by ScotchBonnet CONTRIBUTOR (31 Reviews)
July 13th, 2021 | 10 replies


Release Date: 1987 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Twisted, melodic mega-distortion.

Released in December 1987, “You’re Living All Over Me” is the second studio album by Massachusetts based alternative rock legends Dinosaur Jr. Following on from the strange mix of folk and hardcore punk on their debut album, “You’re Living All Over Me” projects a sound so far removed from the debut and so ahead of its time that it’s hard to summarise succinctly.

It blends copious amounts of noise with addictive riffs, catchy hooks and glazes it all with wonderfully humbling sense of melancholy. J. Mascis demonstrates such skill and ingenuity in his guitar playing that at points, it’s borderline genius without the intricacy of virtuosity. Lou Barlow’s thick, driving bass lines and Murph’s pounding drum rhythms and very tight fills are the perfect accompaniment.

The opening track “Little Fury Things” contains some of the laziest, drawling vocals imaginable and makes Neil Young sound energetic in comparison. The vocal melody is immersive, nostalgic and will get stuck in your head all day. The following “Kracked” is full to the brim with memorable hooks and riffs.

The highlight of the album for me personally is the epic “Sludgefeast” which juxtaposes mellow vocal parts against incredible angular guitar riffing and boasts an utterly blistering outro with a solo in which Mascis sounds like he’s tearing his guitar apart. Following this, “The Lung” is an interesting riff peppered track with an interesting progressive structure and more superb guitar work from Mascis.

“Raisans” is easily the most musically accessible track on the album with its infectiously catchy chorus and is pretty much just a great simple punk rock song. Despite this, they still manage to inject some weirdness and make song sound chilling by including recordings of the screams and moans of patients in a nursing home within the middle breakdown.

I could go on in a similar vein about all the featured songs but will now summarise by saying that “You’re Living All Over Me” is a piece of work so undeniably influential on the alternative rock movement of the 90s that without it, the entire scene would have sounded somewhat different and evidently not for the better. You can clearly hear Nirvana without the anger, Foo Fighters without the polished radio friendliness and The Smashing Pumpkins without the anal musical precision – all long before these bands became established.

Simply put, it’s an essential album for any fan of alternative rock music and was a major stepping stone in paving the way for some of the biggest names in the genre and is one of the most important releases of the late 20th century.

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Attribution:
http://www.metalmusicarchives.com/review/youre-living-all-over-me/639000



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user ratings (1480)
4.3
superb
other reviews of this album
Deadwing42 (5)
A fuzz drenched masterpiece from start to finish...

The Jungler (4.5)
...

Neoteric (5)
Besides from the production and J's voice, this is absolute essential stuff....

rock4Him (2)
An overindulgence in pretension, or just incompetence?...



Comments:Add a Comment 
sonictheplumber
July 13th 2021


17592 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

didnt read but i support the 5 :D

WeepingBanana
July 13th 2021


11395 Comments


check Deep Wound

YoYoMancuso
Staff Reviewer
July 13th 2021


19402 Comments

Album Rating: 4.7 | Sound Off

i approve this message

EoinCofa
July 13th 2021


916 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

“it’s borderline genius without the intricacy of virtuosity”. Very accurate. Good job

MetalMarcJK
July 14th 2021


1255 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Great review, BJJr. 👍🏼



I bought this album without ever hearing it. SST used to take out either a half or full-page ads in Thrasher Magazine. I saw the weird-ass album cover and their name and knew it’d be good. Went to Barstow Music and ordered it, but it took a few weeks to get it because SST didn’t make enough copies (didn’t expect it to move like it did).



J perplexed me with his guitar sounds, but eventually I figured out the multiple distortion pedal trick after much experimentation. The sonics of this album are excellent. It’s a banger with headphones (not your earbuds).

ShadowRemains
July 14th 2021


28091 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

anyone who likes this should listen to treepeople

conesmoke
July 14th 2021


7875 Comments


I just checked treepeople, they really do have something similar in their sound. They sound great

BitterJalapenoJr
Contributing Reviewer
July 14th 2021


1183 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I also just checked out Treepeople. Went for "Guilt, Regret, Embarrassment." Really enjoyed it and will revisit soon!

BitterJalapenoJr
Contributing Reviewer
July 14th 2021


1183 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I also just checked out Treepeople. Went for "Guilt, Regret, Embarrassment." Really enjoyed it and will revisit soon!

parksungjoon
August 7th 2021


47231 Comments


wait who are u



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