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La Cucaracha is just another sprawling Ween record--fans will love it, neophytes will be confused—but it's the best sprawling Ween record since 1997's "The Mollusk."
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La Cucaracha is the sound of Ween cutting loose, reveling in the lower budget and expectations an indie label brings, and playing music that simply sounds good.
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Ween fans have come to expect the unexpected from this act, but even diehards will be thrilled by the sheer musical schizophrenia of La Cucaracha.
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It’s not a return to the primordial, tape-hissy grandeur of the early recordings, but it is a return to playful, genre-scrambling pop; this is probably the best and funniest Ween album since “Chocolate and Cheese,” from 1994.
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MojoIt's better to simply let La Cucaracha happen and enjoy how much Gene and Dean toy with and transgress musical forms while still playing them to a high degree of invention, proficiency and sincerity. [Dec 2007, p.99]
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The finished product is a cobbled-together dazzle that contorts your mouth into a 50-minute succession of grins and wows.
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Under The RadarThe album excels on many levels, but ultimately what keeps bringing me back to Ween is their uncanny ability to throw a disparate mix of styles and genres onto an album and actually succeed where so many bands fail. [Fall 2007, p.77]
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La Cucaracha does feature many songs that center around the theme of relationships, be it ones of love, commerce, murder or spirituality, told in the most dizzying array of musical styles Ween has provided for its listener since "Pure Guava."
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When it comes to creating nuanced and irreverent, yet oddly touching, pop and rock simulacra, no one really touches pseudonymous Pennsylvania duo Gene and Dean Ween, still together after 23 years.
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Next to 2003's comparatively straight-shooting "Quebec," Ween's first studio album in four years is flush with quick right turns.
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On La Cucaracha, possibly out of a debt to realism, the duo has mostly chosen material founded on notions of placidity (or, in the case of "Friends", erased much of the original color), purposefully disallowing their own music its previous vitality.
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La Cucaracha is still a bit of a disappointment, short on memorable tunes and a bit muddier and more piecemeal than it should be.
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Uncut'Object' is a highlight, as is the lovely 'Sweetheart In The Summer.' [Dec 2007, p.119]
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Here are 13 songs of dire cod-reggae, OK stoner rock and quite-good-'80s AOR, which makes them the thinking man's Tenacious D, for what that's worth.
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SpinInstead of psychedelic pop or Princely funk, they regurgitate limp fake reggae, crappy country yee-haw, dorky Eurodance, and nasty New Age. [Dec 2007, p.126]
User score distribution:
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Positive: 31 out of 37
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Mixed: 4 out of 37
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Negative: 2 out of 37
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Nov 13, 2020
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Sep 8, 2010
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DouglasS.Aug 31, 2009WEEN~The greatest band of all time.