Dallas
Observer - April 2000
Tripping Daisy – Self Titled Review
Title: Out Here
Tripping Daisy
Tripping Daisy

(Good Records/Sugar Fix
Recordings)
The first thing you notice about
the cover of Tripping Daisy's new self-titled album isn't the Brady Bunch
motif, a tic-tac-toe board dotted with pictures of the band members and
grapefruit halves. No, the eyes travel up and left past singer Tim DeLaughter
(in the spot Alice always held) to the photograph of Wes Berggren. It's shaded
green, like a Polaroid taken years ago and stored in the backyard shed inside a
box. Actually, it's a recent photo, taken before his death last October, which
seems forever ago and just like yesterday all at once. Inside, the other four
members (DeLaughter, bassist Mark Pirro, guitarist Philip Karnats, and drummer
Ben Curtis) dedicate their latest and last to Berggren; this is Tripping Daisy's
last stand as Tripping Daisy.
But it isn't a tearful farewell.
Instead, this is Tripping Daisy's fireworks-and-hot-fudge-sundaes going-away
party -- the exclamation point on a career of catchy melodies, hallucinogenic
anthems, and shows filled with paper airplanes and bubble machines. The band
recorded the album a year ago and had originally planned to release it in
November. It was to be a goodbye to Island Records, the label that had released
the group's three previous efforts: 1993' Bill, 1995's I Am an Elastic
Firecracker, and 1998's Jesus Hits Like the Atom Bomb. The disc was
also supposed to be a new beginning, one of which they had complete control,
releasing albums as they wanted on their own label Good Records. During the
months the album was delayed, a few changes were made: "Community Mantra," the
last song the band recorded together, was added to the album, and Wes' father,
Don Berggren, added a Fender Rhodes intro to the previously unfinished "Soothing
Jubilee."
And this is Tripping Daisy at its
best. Like the remake of "One Through Four," which was first released on Bill,
the band almost comes full circle on Tripping Daisy. It shows that
they've grown up despite working in a time machine, looking back at the 1960s
and ahead to the 2060s. Pirro's traveling bass line and DeLaughter's vocals
still carry the listener through "One Through Four," but this time the path
curves through lush scenery instead of zooming across a barren landscape. "Kids
Are Calling" jumps and fizzes like Pop Rocks on the tongue with its tangle of
strings, keyboards, and the infectious "in the sun" refrain. There are several
of Tripping Daisy's signature rocking pop songs, but the band also slows for
more symphonic, introspective moments such as the dreamy and beautiful "Drama
Day Weekend." When the space after "The Sudden Shift Worried Him" becomes a
hidden track (which could have been titled "Break it On Down"), Tripping
Daisy and Tripping Daisy end on a smile instead of sorrow. Which was always
the band's expertise anyway.
—Shannon Sutlief
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