
Song
God is an Indian and You're an *sshole
Modest Mouse
Released:
Label:
Epic
Modest Mouse's first full album in eight years picks up Isaac Brock's sour common-man's existentialism more or less where it left off: equal parts sardonic melancholy (the title track; the loping acoustic ditty "God Is an Indian and You're an Asshole") and prickly, horn-spiked dance-rock ("The Ground Walks, with Time in a Box"; "Lampshades on Fire," which gives a jaunty jolt to 2004's "The World at Large"). The 2015 version of Modest Mouse doesn't have the frazzled punk attack of previous versions, but Brock's grumpy, tender pessimism remains intact.
About This Album
Modest Mouse's first full album in eight years picks up Isaac Brock's sour common-man's existentialism more or less where it left off: equal parts sardonic melancholy (the title track; the loping acoustic ditty "God Is an Indian and You're an Asshole") and prickly, horn-spiked dance-rock ("The Ground Walks, with Time in a Box"; "Lampshades on Fire," which gives a jaunty jolt to 2004's "The World at Large"). The 2015 version of Modest Mouse doesn't have the frazzled punk attack of previous versions, but Brock's grumpy, tender pessimism remains intact.
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About This Album
Modest Mouse's first full album in eight years picks up Isaac Brock's sour common-man's existentialism more or less where it left off: equal parts sardonic melancholy (the title track; the loping acoustic ditty "God Is an Indian and You're an Asshole") and prickly, horn-spiked dance-rock ("The Ground Walks, with Time in a Box"; "Lampshades on Fire," which gives a jaunty jolt to 2004's "The World at Large"). The 2015 version of Modest Mouse doesn't have the frazzled punk attack of previous versions, but Brock's grumpy, tender pessimism remains intact.