Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Superchunk|Majesty Shredding

Majesty Shredding

Superchunk

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Superchunk never broke up officially after the release of 2001’s Here’s to Shutting Up album. They played the occasional live show, put out compilations and bootlegs, contributed to soundtracks, and released a couple singles and an EP, but no albums until 2010’s Majesty Shredding. Since they were never really gone, it’s hard to call the album a true comeback, but it is an impressive return to the spotlight as well as a heartwarming return to form. The album casts aside almost all of the experiments the band tried on the last couple albums and forgoes outside contributors, orchestration, and production tricks. Apart from the horns on “Digging for Something” and a viola on “Fractures in Plaster,” the record is just the four members of Superchunk bashing out trademark high-quality indie rock bolstered by loud drums, a thrilling twin-guitar attack, and Mac’s always impassioned vocals. It’s like they traveled back to a time before they started to tire of their sound and began looking for new ways to put the songs across -- back to Here’s Where the Strings Come In, but with songs about kids, nostalgia, and growing old mixed in with the usual anxiety and heartache. They may have planned it or it may have been a happy accident; either way it was a great move to revisit their classic sound. Usually a band fails when trying this, because it feels like a ploy or a marketing decision, but in the case of Majesty Shredding it sounds completely organic thanks to the energy the band invests in the music. Plus, Mac delivered a batch of straightforward songs that lend themselves well to being thrashed out by the group. The moments of calm between the rockers are fine too, never sounding tired or rote, but always spilling over with emotion and real feeling. Just like they always have over the band’s 20-plus years. There are songs here that stand with the best the band has done (“Learned to Surf,” “Crossed Wires,” “Winter Games”), songs that will break your heart with their minute details on human frailty (“Fractures in Plaster”), songs that you’ll want to sing along to at top volume (“My Gap Feels Weird”), and songs that sound exactly how you want Superchunk to sound (“Slow Drip,” “Digging for Something”). They may not be the hippest band around in 2010 but they sound as fresh and important as they did in 1990, 1995, or 2001, and Majesty Shredding is the kind of album that’ll make you glad to be a fan of indie rock.
© Tim Sendra /TiVo

More info

Majesty Shredding

Superchunk

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From $10.83/month

1
Digging for Something
00:03:30

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

2
My Gap Feels Weird
00:03:12

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

3
Rosemarie
00:04:15

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

4
Crossed Wires
00:03:46

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

5
Slow Drip
00:02:50

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

6
Fractures in Plaster
00:05:18

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

7
Learned to Surf
00:03:52

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

8
Winter Games
00:04:11

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

9
Rope Light
00:02:32

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

10
Hot Tubes
00:03:48

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

11
Everything at Once
00:04:13

Superchunk, Composer, MainArtist - All The Songs Sound The Same Music (BMI), MusicPublisher

2010 Merge Records 2010 Merge Records

Album review

Superchunk never broke up officially after the release of 2001’s Here’s to Shutting Up album. They played the occasional live show, put out compilations and bootlegs, contributed to soundtracks, and released a couple singles and an EP, but no albums until 2010’s Majesty Shredding. Since they were never really gone, it’s hard to call the album a true comeback, but it is an impressive return to the spotlight as well as a heartwarming return to form. The album casts aside almost all of the experiments the band tried on the last couple albums and forgoes outside contributors, orchestration, and production tricks. Apart from the horns on “Digging for Something” and a viola on “Fractures in Plaster,” the record is just the four members of Superchunk bashing out trademark high-quality indie rock bolstered by loud drums, a thrilling twin-guitar attack, and Mac’s always impassioned vocals. It’s like they traveled back to a time before they started to tire of their sound and began looking for new ways to put the songs across -- back to Here’s Where the Strings Come In, but with songs about kids, nostalgia, and growing old mixed in with the usual anxiety and heartache. They may have planned it or it may have been a happy accident; either way it was a great move to revisit their classic sound. Usually a band fails when trying this, because it feels like a ploy or a marketing decision, but in the case of Majesty Shredding it sounds completely organic thanks to the energy the band invests in the music. Plus, Mac delivered a batch of straightforward songs that lend themselves well to being thrashed out by the group. The moments of calm between the rockers are fine too, never sounding tired or rote, but always spilling over with emotion and real feeling. Just like they always have over the band’s 20-plus years. There are songs here that stand with the best the band has done (“Learned to Surf,” “Crossed Wires,” “Winter Games”), songs that will break your heart with their minute details on human frailty (“Fractures in Plaster”), songs that you’ll want to sing along to at top volume (“My Gap Feels Weird”), and songs that sound exactly how you want Superchunk to sound (“Slow Drip,” “Digging for Something”). They may not be the hippest band around in 2010 but they sound as fresh and important as they did in 1990, 1995, or 2001, and Majesty Shredding is the kind of album that’ll make you glad to be a fan of indie rock.
© Tim Sendra /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz?

On sale now...

evermore

Taylor Swift

evermore Taylor Swift

folklore: the long pond studio sessions (from the Disney+ special)

Taylor Swift

folklore (deluxe version - explicit)

Taylor Swift

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane
More on Qobuz
By Superchunk

Wild Loneliness

Superchunk

Wild Loneliness Superchunk

Everybody Dies / As in a Blender

Superchunk

Superchunk (Remastered)

Superchunk

"This Summer" B/W "Cruel Summer"

Superchunk

No Pocky for Kitty (Remastered)

Superchunk

Playlists

You may also like...

Wall Of Eyes

The Smile

Wall Of Eyes The Smile

First Two Pages of Frankenstein

The National

Born To Die

Lana Del Rey

Born To Die Lana Del Rey

Ohio Players

The Black Keys

Ohio Players The Black Keys

WHEN WE ALL FALL ASLEEP, WHERE DO WE GO?

Billie Eilish