Shimmer (Surgery album) explained

Shimmer
Type:studio
Artist:Surgery
Cover:Surgery - Shimmer.jpg
Released:April 5, 1994
Recorded:Sound City, Van Nuys, California
Entourage Studios, North Hollywood, California
Genre:Noise rock
Length:45:15
Label:Atlantic
Producer:GGGarth, Surgery
Prev Title:Trim, 9th Ward High Roller
Prev Year:1993

Shimmer is the second and final album by Surgery.[1] [2] It was released in 1994 through Atlantic Records.[3] Due to the death of frontman Sean McDonnell nine months after the album's release, the band broke up.

Critical reception

The New York Times wrote that Surgery "operates in the low end of rock's frequency spectrum, bringing the bass to the center of their sound, rarely hitting the high strings on the guitar, and churning out music that values density over melody."[4] The Washington Post deemed the album "unexceptional electric blues-rock."[5] The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that the band's "riffing and tandem vocals are a modern-rock reduction of Bachman-Turner Overdrive."[6]

Personnel

Surgery
Production and additional personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Surgery | Biography & History. AllMusic.
  2. Book: Blush, Steven. New York Rock: From the Rise of The Velvet Underground to the Fall of CBGB. October 4, 2016. St. Martin's Publishing Group. 9781250083623. Google Books.
  3. David . Sprague . Surgery . . 2007 . March 22, 2013.
  4. Web site: RECORDINGS VIEW; An Earful of Noisy Sludge From Three New York Bands (Published 1994). Neil. Strauss. July 24, 1994. NYTimes.com.
  5. Web site: STRAIGHT SURGERY. Mark. Jenkins. July 29, 1994. www.washingtonpost.com.
  6. Moon . Tom . Two different kinds of N.Y. bands hit town . The Philadelphia Inquirer . May 13, 1994.