| "Wenn eine Gruppe mit drei ep´s zum bekanntesten 
        Geheimtip Englands wird, vermutet man natürlich eine hinterhältige 
        Vermarktungsstrategie. Doch weit gefehlt: The Beta Band hat sich den Ruhm 
        redlich verdient. Auf The Three EP´s rollen Gitarre, Bass und Schlagzeug 
        in Kornkreis-Formationen durch groovigen Psycho-Gitarren-Pop. Für 
        die abwechslungsreichen Arrangements greift das eigentlich akustische 
        Quartett auch mal auf etwas Elektronik zurück, und auch sonst ist 
        alles drin, was vier Spinnern halt so einfällt. Englische Exzentrik 
        in höchster Qualität, wie sie sonst nur Julian Cope produziert. 
        (Rolling Stone. Formidabel)  | 
  
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    | Buzzy Glasgow combo gather their complete works to 
      date - three highly-collectable limited edition EPs from last year. Seventy-eight 
      minutes in all. People dig The Beta Band for several reasons. Among these are: they sound 
      bonkers; they sound single-mindedly joyful in their pursuit of the wooziest 
      grooves in the cosmos; they sound like they don't give a flying one. They 
      remind you of stuff but are also unique. Their packaging's nice too. Thank 
      God for a band on a major with the guts to plough their own furrow (and 
      a major label prepared to pay for it, come to that). Highlights? The let's-get-it-on-with-a-tambourine 
      intimacy of I Know, the lovely monastic Dr Baker, the super-laid-back lope 
      of idler's manifesto Dry The Rain, the stoned prowl of Push It Out and the 
      16-minute meander The Monolith. The landscape of their sound is littered 
      with bongos, lazy acoustic guitar, Jew's harp, bird song, hand claps and 
      dub bass. Weaving through it all, the multi-tracked, sleepy voice of Steve 
      Mason. So idiosyncratic and unprocessed is this music that people are moved 
      to pay £30 for copies of the original EPs. One day you know they'll 
      lock eyeballs with the times like, say, Pink Floyd did. Right now they're 
      working up a good groove banging on the gates of dawn. (MOJO)
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    | The Beta Band have a habit of stumbling across gold 
      as they weave their ramshackle way round a tune. While Steve Mason's gruff 
      singing, resembling the mumbling of a barely conscious man, complements 
      the unpredictable brew. But in stubbornly avoiding the normal conventions 
      of songwriting they occasionally veer away from a tune altogether. This 
      results in epics like Monolith, which clocks in at just under 16 minutes 
      and sounds like aimless doodling along to BBC sound effects records. However 
      at their best (and most succinct), as on Dry The Rain and It's Over, their 
      ability to wrest a tune from the eclectic instruments and percussion is 
      akin to the best of the sonic invention of Beck. (Q. 3/5) |