Slint - (1991) - Good Morning Captain video free download


463,217
Duration: 07:40
Uploaded: 2010/10/02

Artist: Slint

Album: Spiderland

Release Date: 1991

Label: Touch & Go

More known for its frequent name-checks than its actual music, Spiderland remains one of the most essential and chilling releases in the mumbling post-rock arena. Even casual listeners will be able to witness an experimental power-base that the American underground has come to treasure. Indeed, the lumbering quiet-loud motif has been lifted by everybody from Lou Barlow to Mogwai, the album's emotional gelidity has done more to move away from prog-rock mistakes than almost any of the band's subsequent disciples, and it's easy to hear how the term "Slint dynamics" has become an indie categorization of its own. Most interestingly, however, is how even a seething angularity to songs like "Nosferatu Man" (disquieting, vampirish stop-starts) or "Good Morning, Captain" (a murmuring nod to "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner") certainly signaled the beginning of the end for the band. Recording was intense, traumatic, and one more piece of evidence supporting the theory that band members had to be periodically institutionalized during the completion of the album. Spiderland remains, though, not quite the insurmountable masterpiece its reputation may suggest. Brian McMahan softly speaks/screams his way through the asphyxiated music and too often evokes strangled pity instead of outright empathy. Which probably speaks more about the potential dangers of pretentious post-rock than the frigid musical climate of the album itself. Surely, years later, Spiderland is still a strong, slightly overrated, compelling piece of investigational despair that is a worthy asset to most any experimentalist's record collection.

Comments

8 years ago

Ricardo Clemente

"nod to Rime of the Ancient Mariner" my ass. let's leave music and art descriptions to people who have actually felt things for the work. i love the poem Rime of the Ancient Mariner and i definitely see some parallels/similar allegory here. this song isn't just a fucking nod though and i'll be damned if Slint was thinking about any poem or entertained anything about 'experimenting' at all when they wrote and played this.here is rock music in just about the rawest, no-bullshit form. here is a hallucination of a recollection, a story of survival, dwelling in the fringes of sanity, drained, floating empty in the bitter wreckage of everything you thought you were and what you thought mattered, and drifting now in the austere cold of pure aloneness (not loneliness), all the crap is washed away, further and further from you into the ocean, and there is a child who will lead us home, and a memory that will keep me going til next we meet, now that the only thing that matters is the only thing that's left, and this one and only thing is in my heart, for you, wherever you are, whoever you are, whatever your name will be this last and final time. now that i've lost all i can finally give. good fucking morning to me

8 years ago

LOOOOY

Please.It's cold.

8 years ago

viasgam

Slint - Good Morning Captain#Slint 

8 years ago

alex marshall

Trying to find my way home..

8 years ago

AL SAULSO

I remember skateboarding to this song!!!

9 years ago

Poached Womb

i wet the bed to this

9 years ago

burningburney94

God damn. The last section of this song is fucking amazing. 

9 years ago

Shaggywonda

Spiderland, is the fucking Blueprint for Mogwai, as much as Mogwai hates to admit it 

9 years ago

eyesintheroad

FCK!!!!!!

9 years ago

ifitrisia

I am just gonna sit here, repeat this song 1000x and be miserable as fuck.

9 years ago

Mark Moreno

In Pajo we trust!

9 years ago

arnaud mahu

K I D S

9 years ago

stigma oftheripper

fuck yes 

9 years ago

Renato de Rezende

Great song, Improvements to you David Pajo =o)

9 years ago

Blackbullnova69

Fucking beautiful album. This record was sort of like the Big Bang of modern Post Rock.

9 years ago

GINSHINKZL s

I'm not sure I "understand" this piece - anyone want to share what they feel about this track and why it's so loved?

9 years ago

foxyy##

I'm listening to it over and over again. The last minute is so intense and pure, you're right.

9 years ago

Peter R

The first time I listened to this song I was in college. Not the first time I heard it, mind you, but the first time I actually LISTENED to it.I was driving back home and was low on gas and the roads were in terrible shape due to heavy snow and especially cold temperatures. I lived about a half hour to 45 minutes away from where I went to school, and both the town I lived in and my college's "city" were pretty rural, so the area in between was all farmland. IIRC it was no more than 5-10 degrees F without windchill, so with no phone, if I ran out of gas I was at the very least in for a very unpleasant night.For some reason I had decided to take the back roads instead of the highway, then I realized I was an idiot and tried to find my way back to the highway. You think farmland is easy to navigate but it all looks the same. Needless to say, I got lost.Right around the time my gas gauge hit the empty bar was when this song came on shuffle. It was so dark that night, and so cold, and I was so lost, that my fear was genuine when I listened to this, and it was an experience I'll never forget. Great song.

9 years ago

grockcomedy

Great monotonous song.

9 years ago

Juan Bascur Núñez

slint, pioneros del post rock a los que no hay que dejar de reivindicar!

Related Videos