Beauty (album)
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Beauty is the second demo recorded by Neutral Milk Hotel
Neutral Milk Hotel
Neutral Milk Hotel was an American indie rock band formed by singer, guitarist and songwriter Jeff Mangum in the early 1990s. The band was noted for its experimental sound, obscure lyrics and eclectic instrumentation....

, recorded in 1992, released on a cassette tape.

Track listing

All songs written by Jeff Mangum except where noted.
  1. "Engine" – 4:23
  2. "Circle of Friends" – 3:28
  3. "Wishful Eyes" – 6:01
  4. "Gardenhead/Leave Me Alone" – 5:48
  5. "Sailing Through" – 4:37
  6. "Bucket" – 3:11
  7. "Noisy Racket" – 3:56
  8. "Conversation with Robert Schneider" – 6:17
  9. "Someone is Waiting" – 1:45
  10. "Hypnotic Sounds" – 2:09
  11. "Brittany Janz" – 2:09
  12. "Mustard is worth dying for" – 2:09
  13. "I don't believe you have the right to dougie" – 2:09

Additional information

Said to be from 1992. As with Invent Yourself a Shortcake, it's debatable whether this cassette is an actual "album" or just a collection of recordings Jeff put together. No original physical copy is known to exist. It is possible that Jeff put this tape together for friends and it wound up online.

The first five tracks are solo acoustic with Jeff talking a little bit before and after each song, as if he's playing an acoustic show in front of people (though there appears to be only one other guy in the room). "Gardenhead/Leave Me Alone" is much slower than the familiar, released version. The second half of the tape features two electric songs and three non-songs: "Noisy Racket" (possibly not the song's real title; a metal freak out), "Conversation with Will Hart" (often mislabeled "Conversation with Robert Schneider"; not a song, but just what the title implies), and the sound collage track "Aunt Eggma Blowtorch" (often labeled "Hypnotic Sounds"; same version as found on the Everything Is single, only here it has an extra minute-long jam at the beginning.)

It seems every circulating version of this tape is a bit poppy in the left channel, sounding as if it were transferred from vinyl. However, the right channel sounds fine. It remains unknown if the original tape was made that way, or if it's just a defect present on the particular copy that made its way online.
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