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DON CABALLERO - Don Caballero 2 DLP
Don Caballero 2 is the second studio album by American math rock band Don Caballero. It was released in 1995 on Touch and Go Records. The album is the group's longest, clocking in at almost one hour in length.
Ira Robbins, in Trouser Press, wrote that "Don Caballero hasnât completely sacrificed its softer side to the gods of skronk, and the meditative 'Cold Knees (in April)' suggests the sound of several thumb pianos, arranged by Philip Glass and fingered by EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten."
Ira Robbins, in Trouser Press, wrote that "Don Caballero hasnât completely sacrificed its softer side to the gods of skronk, and the meditative 'Cold Knees (in April)' suggests the sound of several thumb pianos, arranged by Philip Glass and fingered by EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten."
Don Caballero 2 is the second studio album by American math rock band Don Caballero. It was released in 1995 on Touch and Go Records. The album is the group's longest, clocking in at almost one hour in length.
Ira Robbins, in Trouser Press, wrote that "Don Caballero hasnât completely sacrificed its softer side to the gods of skronk, and the meditative 'Cold Knees (in April)' suggests the sound of several thumb pianos, arranged by Philip Glass and fingered by EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten."
Ira Robbins, in Trouser Press, wrote that "Don Caballero hasnât completely sacrificed its softer side to the gods of skronk, and the meditative 'Cold Knees (in April)' suggests the sound of several thumb pianos, arranged by Philip Glass and fingered by EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten."
$32.41
DON CABALLERO - Don Caballero 2 DLPâ
$32.41
Description
Don Caballero 2 is the second studio album by American math rock band Don Caballero. It was released in 1995 on Touch and Go Records. The album is the group's longest, clocking in at almost one hour in length.
Ira Robbins, in Trouser Press, wrote that "Don Caballero hasnât completely sacrificed its softer side to the gods of skronk, and the meditative 'Cold Knees (in April)' suggests the sound of several thumb pianos, arranged by Philip Glass and fingered by EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten."
Ira Robbins, in Trouser Press, wrote that "Don Caballero hasnât completely sacrificed its softer side to the gods of skronk, and the meditative 'Cold Knees (in April)' suggests the sound of several thumb pianos, arranged by Philip Glass and fingered by EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten."











