Magnog

Real Name:
Jeff Reily, Dana Shinn, Phil Drake
Profile:
The first Magnog demo cassette arrived in the Kranky P.O. Box in the summer of 1995. At the time the tapes arrived in Chicago the average age of each band member was under twenty. For their debut album, Magnog enlisted Andy Brown of Jessamine to engineer. Magnog was released on compact disc and LP in March, 1996. After the debut album came out it was reviewed by Guitar Player, The New York Times and Rolling Stone, Magnog played the Vienna Jazz Festival and was chosen by Pearl Jam to open shows. Magnog played out, recorded a single for the British Enraptured label and began preparing their second studio album. Live shows were highlighted by extended improvisations and instrument swamping. Magnog broke up without finishing the recordings they had started as a projected second studio album. It turned out that health problems of all members destroyed the band. Jeff Reily also released some solo material. Some of Magnog contemporaries are Cul De Sac, Flying Saucer Attack and Charalambides.
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Shortcut Code: [a58488]
Data Quality Rating: Correct

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Discography

Releases:
Magnog (Album) (2 versions)   Kranky 1996
Mist Waves Riding the Hills (7")   Enraptured 1996
More Weather (2xCD, Album)   Kranky 1997
Appears On:
Decalogue (Vinyl, Ltd, MiniAlbum, Cle) Still Moving Ochre Records 1999
Tracks Appear On:
Angelfood Electronics Volume One (LP) Waiting To Remember Kakemix Records 1996
Angelfood Electronics Volumes 1 And 2 (CD, Comp) Waiting To Remember Kakemix Records 1997
Kompilation (CD) A Moments Seam Southern Records 1998
Decalogue (Vinyl, Ltd, MiniAlbum, Cle) Still Moving Ochre Records 1999
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Reviews & Discussion

Review by Alastis Feb 09, 2005 (edited over 4 years ago)
Probably least-known band of Kranky roster, these guys still deserve attention. For one they had a very different sound from most artists recording for this label. Its clearly atmospheric, moody music with elements of dark ambient and space rock thrown in. Compositions are usually long, but not boring - what keeps them together is high level of musicianship. Too bad that Magnog have produced so little material - they could've developed into something bigger.

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