EelsMeet the Eels: Essential Eels, Vol. 1: 1996–2006  | Geffen  January 14,
 2008 12:49:10 PM 
 
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Has Mark Oliver Everett ever tasted the agony of writer’s block? Since he started releasing records as Eels in 1996 (following an earlier stint as A Man Called E), Everett has issued work (including live discs, soundtrack stuff, and a 2005 double album about God) at a pace that’s far outstripped the general audience’s ability to keep up. As a result, he’s gone from being an alt-rock novelty maker (remember “Novocain for the Soul”?) to a cult-fave curio (how about I Am the Messiah, credited to Everett’s hip-hop alter-ego, MC Honky?). Two new Eels packages — this overstuffed best-of CD/DVD and the two-CD/DVD Useless Trinkets: B-Sides, Soundtracks, Rarities and Unreleased — demonstrate that though he’s no longer interested in serving as a Gen X spokesman, Everett’s wry pop-rock stylings have remained pretty sharp despite the overuse. Highlights actually aren’t his point. Which doesn’t mean they don’t exist — even Useless Trinkets has its moments, among them Jon Brion’s previously unreleased remix of “Climbing to the Moon,” which vibrates with delicate chamber-folk beauty, and Everett’s reading of “Get Ur Freak On,” which isn’t nearly as embarrassing as you’d expect.
  
	
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							-  Never mind its tough-girl alt-porn feminism: SuicideGirls has already moved on to a new generation
 
						
							-  Some Things at Trinity
 
						
							-  Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz explains the punishing cost of staying any longer
 
						
							-  A last-minute Emperor at the BSO, Gatti and Ohlsson, BLO’s Elisir, and Brahms meets Weill with the Cantata Singers
 
						
							-  Janet’s Discipline and Badu’s New AmErykah
 
						
							-  If you want to lose the ‘fright wig,’ try ditching your shampoo
 
						
					       
				 
			 
			
				
					
					
							-  Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz explains the punishing cost of staying any longer
 
						
							-  Now more than ever, this is Marty Baron’s newspaper
 
						
							-  Julian Kuerti leads the BSO and Leon Fleisher, Stockhausen’s Mantra at Harvard, Emmanuel’s St. John Passion
 
						
							-  Free speech trumps Boston cops
 
						
							-  Al Basile is still groovin’ onThe Tinge
 
						
							-  The Left Bank meets the West Side
 
						
					       
				 
			 
			
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												Women as Lovers | Kill Rock Stars
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												Get Awkward | Ecstatic Peace/Universal
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												Autumn Fallin' | Blue Note
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												Mockingbird | New Line
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												Cowboy Junkies, k.d. lang, and Kathleen Edwards are not hockey pucks
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												Flock | Yep Roc
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												Do You Like Rock Music? | Rough Trade
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												Solo shots
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												Detours | A+M
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												Tim's House | Verve Forecast
 
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	- Cornerstone revives Neil Simon’s Biloxi Blues
 
 - The proto-man comes home on Plague of the Planet
 - Crossing Lines | Mu
 - Bully
 - Girls Sing | Geometriya
 - Golden Delicious | ATO
 - Super Roots 9 | Thrill Jockey
 - Women as Lovers | Kill Rock Stars
 - The Pubcrawlers give you a reason to celebrate, March 17
 - Get Awkward | Ecstatic Peace/Universal
 
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