GREEN ON RED : GAS FOOD LODGING / GREEN ON RED

    Gas Food Logding
  1. That's What Dreams Were Made For
  2. Black River
  3. Hair Of The Dog
  4. This I Know
  5. Fading Away
  6. Easy Way Out
  7. Sixteen Ways
  8. The Drifter
  9. Sea Of Cortez
  10. We Shall Overcome
  11. Gas Food Lodging
  12. Sixteen Ways II
    Green On Red
  13. Death And Angels
  14. Hair And Skin
  15. Black Night
  16. Illustrated Crawling
  17. Aspirin
  18. Lost World
  19. Apartment 6

Label : Restless Records

Length : 61:09

Released : 2003

Originally released : 1985 (Gas Food Lodging) / 1982 (Green On Red)

Review (AllMusic) : Restless Records admirably wanted to pad out their reissue of Green on Red's superb 1985 album Gas Food Lodging, so they tacked on the other Green on Red title in their catalog, the group's 1982 debut EP. A nice idea to be sure, but the trouble is that the two records represent Green on Red at two very different points of their development - Green on Red brought together seven slices of moody psychedelic-influenced pop with a dark and buzzy undercurrent, while Gas Food Lodging was the strongest work of the group's proto-roots rock period, as they took stock of the state of the union as seen through the windshield of their van. In short, they're two records of no small interest to Green on Red fans, but they make rather odd bedfellows in this matchup - Gas Food Lodging would have made more sense alongside the No Free Lunch EP, while Green on Red would sit better with the Gravity Talks album, but licensing being what it is, this is the pairing Restless has to offer. At the very least, the new Gas Food Lodging sounds cleaner and more full-bodied than its previous vinyl incarnation. Unfortunately, the Green on Red EP appears to have been salvaged from damaged tapes, with noticeable noise and occasional audio drop-outs; given its rarity, it's still a nice bonus, but the fidelity makes it sound all the more deficient compared to Gas Food Lodging. Then again, if you program out the Green on Red tracks, you're left with one of the best albums to come out of the '80s paisley underground scene, and that's no small thing.