Diary
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Seven
- In Circles
- Song About An Angel
- Round
- 47
- The Blankets Were The Stairs
- Pheurton Skeurto
- Shadows
- 48
- Grendel
- Sometimes
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #9504 in Music
- Released on: 1994-05-10
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
It's a Tough Call
Sunny Day Real Estate's debut is one of the coolest CDs I've heard in a while. Their stuff is provocative, original, and best of all, not easy to like. This is the kind of album where learning to appreciate it is an achievement. My first time through, it seemed devoid of melody with enough grating screams thrown in to make it a bit of a chore to listen to. But on my second time, I found that the subtle melodies were secretly brilliant, and simply overshadowed by the strange, harsh sound of the music.
Tracks 1-3 and 7-9 are extraordinary, featuring sweet guitar riffage and brooding, dark melodies. The rest of the tracks are not your typical filler. The problem is that they have a tendency to go from pleasant, dark melody to ferocious, unrestrained yelling and grungy guitar with no breaks. They are difficult to listen to and not as strong as the 6 tracks I listed. My favorites are "Shadows," which has a strong enough melody and guitar-line to make up for the yelling vocal, and "Pheurton Skeurto," a brief, lilting piano ballad that I've grown to love after a few listens.
Overall, I'm glad I bought this, but if you're looking for easy thrills, you won't find them here. This music takes time and at least a limited musical intellect and appreciation to get into. But it's worth the trouble.
Packs a nice punch even if it is a bit strained at times
3 1/2
Hard hitting, earnest alternative punk's heavily cited, and rightfully so, disc explores some of the early origins of the sub-genre that has gotten nothing but stomped on in the past 5-10 years due to heavy and unflattering imitators- emo. In 1994 however, most of the brittle emotional truths pouring out of this unit while recording what would become known as their masterwork ended up resonating with a lasting purity that still holds up to this day while compatriots usually fail to emulate anything as raw. Sure, the band's heart-on-sleeve ethos does not necessarily fill out all of the compositional trajectory, particularly in the latter half. And while the vocalist remains a distinct fusion of vulnerability, sorrow, and ugliness, some of his inflections tend to get a bit repetitive (ie: how he will stretch out too many lines in that purposely grating tone of his). Flaws intact, Diary is still a potent reminder for some of the lesser known (albeit classic in it's own right) amazing discs to come out of that era when Independent record labels still usually meant something inspiring.
Fantastic ALBUM! 4.5 Stars -- Emo?...huh?
Took a LONG time to grow on me but absolutely love this album...from beginning to end. I call this an album because the songs sound like they belong together...it just flows. Seems to me that nowadays most cds sound more like collections of songs rather than albums. It's refreshing to enjoy the entire package.
I really don't know how to categorize it...I see people calling it emo...I know emo...folks, this aint emo....yes, it has the languid vocal style that often characterizes emo...but that's where it ends... the layered guitars and drums are absolutlely driven. I hate to say this because I hate metal...but, god forbid, at times, it's more metal than emo. It's like metal's tolerable cousin...possibly the black sheep of the metal family ; )
I have other SDR albums...but this one seems to be the pick of the litter!
Bonus...it's also great music to workout/run to!





