Spectral Worship is a studio album by the indie rock band Guv'ner, released in 1998 on Merge Records.[3] The album contains a cover of "Jealous Guy", by John Lennon, re-titled "Jealous Girl".
| Spectral Worship | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Guv'ner | ||||
| Released | 1998 | |||
| Studio | Rare Book Room, Williamsburg, NY | |||
| Genre | Indie rock | |||
| Label | Merge Records | |||
| Producer | Nicolas Vernhes, Charles Gansa | |||
| Guv'ner chronology | ||||
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| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| NME | |
The Washington Post thought that "singer-guitarist Charles Gansa, bassist-singer Pumpkin Wentzel and drummer Danny Tunick don't demolish traditional song form, but they do like to beat it up a bit."[4] Philadelphia City Paper called the album "a charming swirl of their cheeky, off-key melodicisms and experimental tweeks and wonks ... Even bassist Pumpkin Wentzel's conceptually ill-conceived cover of John Lennon's 'Jealous Guy' works with a little chutzpah."[5] NME concluded that the album "chews on exactly the same pop bubblegum as their previous releases with a nerdy hook here, a quirky instrument there (castanets, Moog, Spanish guitars, etc) but, unlike 1996’s The Hunt, it chooses to hide its considerable light under a bushel of obscurity."[2]
AllMusic wrote that "the album is a frequently brilliant combination of acoustic guitars, assorted tone waves and other varied sounds, drawing them together into minimal but highly dynamic and well-constructed pieces in a beautifully rustic, desolate ballad style."[1]
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