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Smalls Change (Meditations Upon Ageing) Image
Metascore
56

Mixed or average reviews - based on 8 Critic Reviews What's this?

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  • Summary: The debut solo release for the Spinal Tap bass player features guest appearances from Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, Gregg Bisonnette, Larry Carlton, David Crosby, Donald Fagen, Taylor Hawkins, Jim Keltner, Danny Kortchmar, Russ Kunkel, Michael League, Steve Lukather, Jane Lynch, Judith Owen, Phil X,The debut solo release for the Spinal Tap bass player features guest appearances from Jeff "Skunk" Baxter, Gregg Bisonnette, Larry Carlton, David Crosby, Donald Fagen, Taylor Hawkins, Jim Keltner, Danny Kortchmar, Russ Kunkel, Michael League, Steve Lukather, Jane Lynch, Judith Owen, Phil X, Joe Satriani, Paul Shaffer, Chad Smith, The Snarky Puppy Horns, Steve Vai, Richard Thompson, Waddy Wachtel, Rick Wakeman, and Dweezil Zappa. Expand
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 8
  2. Negative: 0 out of 8
  1. Apr 20, 2018
    77
    If you have a soft spot for hard rock shredding but can’t appreciate its pompous contexts unironically, this is the album for you, with Steve Vai, Joe Satriani and Steve Lukather present and taking their eruptive tasks very seriously. A more eclectic guitar hero, Richard Thompson, even pops up to do the metal solo we always suspected he could.
  2. 60
    A full orchestra occasionally adds more bloat to an already over-the-top sound.
  3. Apr 16, 2018
    60
    By grounding it so heavily in the metal that served Spinal Tap so well, Shearer turns Smalls Change into a bit of a grueling hourlong experience--there may be the occasional taste of prog pomp or a Richard Thompson cameo, but it's all in the context of hard rock--but listened to as a series of EPs, the craft behind its silliness shines through and it's quite palatable. Which makes it not all that different from a John Entwistle album.
  4. Classic Rock Magazine
    Jun 6, 2018
    60
    The histrionic power ballad title track is an undeniable hoot. It's just a shame that so little of the rest of the album makes any lasting impression. [May 2018, p.90]
  5. Apr 16, 2018
    50
    Shearer’s vocals, especially on a four-minute-plus opus like the title track, unfortunately demonstrate why he was never that band’s lead singer, detracting from another promising rock opera like “Faith No More.” For die-hard Tap fans only.
  6. Apr 25, 2018
    50
    Is it funny? If you're a 15-year-old boy, you'll love it as there's enough toilet humor here to stun an Ox. Will it be funny after the first listen? Well, the jury is out. But probably not.
  7. Mojo
    Apr 23, 2018
    40
    There's little dry about old guy jokes. [Jun 2018, p.97]b

See all 8 Critic Reviews