Virgin Records
2001
Into The Oh
About This Album
Luaka Bop debuted two new Geggy Tah songs ("Sweat" and "Space Heater") on mp3.com in 1998 in advance of a projected 1999 release date. Due to label-hopping (and other issues?), Geggy Tah's follow-up to the surprising breakthrough Sacred Cow arrived in stores nearly five years later. The delays were not all negative. Into the Oh is more polished than their previous two albums. It is as if the band has released their fourth or fifth album with Into the Oh. It is easy, however, to feel cheated out of more frequent music from the group. The "party album" that the band once wanted to release is still missing in action. Understanding Into the Oh requires reestablishing a relationship with Geggy Tah, much like brushing up on a foreign language before traveling abroad. The reunion is well worth the wait. Into the Oh begins with a phone message from Tommy Jordan's granddad, much like Sacred Cow. This time the band turns it into the album's musical foyer -- an entrance to a personal reflection. "I wanted to ask you a question," granddad says. "Since you are not there I can't ask the machine. So I will say 'goodnight' to the machine." Granddad, unwittingly, has left behind a postmodern update to the famous philosophical quandary: If you leave an answering machine message and no one is there to hear it, did you have a conversation with a machine? So when the first song kicks in immediately, it sounds like Jordan was sitting alone in the dark, screening his calls.
Track List (try tracks 2,3 and 5)

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