Black and Greene Records
2006
The Shredding Tears
About This Album
Although Chicago-born, New York-based multi-instrumentalist Bryan Scary did eventually form a full band called Bryan Scary & the Shredding Tears, his debut album of that title is a one-man band operation (almost: Apollo Sunshine's Jeremy Black re-recorded the drums after Scary was signed to the Black and Greene label) that has just the sort of hermetic, overstuffed quality that's endemic to one-man-band overdub extravaganzas recorded piecemeal over the course of several years. This isn't an insult, mind: Roy Wood's Boulders, R. Stevie Moore's Phonography, the recent work of XTC's Andy Partridge and many other minor pop classics have been recorded in similar circumstances, and echoes of all of the above can be found here. A florid chamber pop album with psychedelic and glam touches, The Shredding Tears is filled with minor-key ballads prone to orchestral flourishes ("The Lesson I Learned" and the title track), weird bits of Paul McCartney and sandbox-era Brian Wilson melodies fed through a bank of vintage synthesizers ("Operaland," "The Little Engine That Couldn't"), trippy psychedelic playfulness (the tape loop-enhanced "The Up and Over Stairwell"), and songs that make plain Scary's shocking vocal resemblance to Squeeze's Glenn Tilbrook (almost all of them, actually, but especially "Operaland" and "Macedonia Hotel").
Track List

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