Glum is an album by the American band Giant Sand, released in 1994.[1][2] It was the band's first album to be distributed by a major label.[3] Giant Sand supported it with a North American tour.[4]
The Philadelphia Daily News wrote that "Gelb writes and growls the glum, surreal sagas of life on the edge with the passion of a man possessed."[6]Rolling Stone said that the title track "trails an especially gnarled solo with an Ivory-soft surf-guitar finale as its lyrics twist from contempt to confusion."[14]Newsday concluded that "if music this genuinely idiosyncratic can penetrate the mainstream, then there truly has been an alternative revolution."[17]Trouser Press opined that Gelb's "unilateral rejection of form can get a bit tiring, especially when the meandering 'Frontage Rd.' runs smack into the stoner fusion of '1 Helvakowboy Song'."[18]
The Vancouver Sun praised "Gelb's idiosyncratic electric guitar style—something like getting Crispin Glover drunk and setting him loose with Neil Young's gear."[19]The Washington Post deemed the album a "self-indulgently slapdash effort."[10] The Times Colonist determined that "Glum sounds like an electric and electrifying soundtrack for a modern Heart of Darkness, if Kurtz were holed up in a broken-down trailer in the California desert instead of the jungle."[20]The Arizona Republic stated that the album "blends the experimental and obscure with twangy, insistent rock beats."[13]
Mojo considered Glum to be "an obscure gem" and Giant Sand's "masterpiece".[21]