dr. dog by johnnie
Best of 2007 -- Dr. Dog (We All Belong)

Daytrotter's Best 15 Albums of 2007: No. 11 Dr. Dog's "We All Belong"

8 January 2008
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Words by Sean Moeller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney

The way that Scott McMicken rolls a homemade cigarette is similar to the way that his band – the Philadelphia golden boys Dr. Dog – make music. It’s rough around the edges, yet thorough. It’s shambolic, yet picturesque and inspiring. McMicken will do most of the work without even looking at the rolling paper and dried tobacco leaves. He’ll pinch, tuck and coil it up, still making good eye contact. There remains that care for everything around him – the person in front of him and the stick he’s about to smoke. It’s a sort of benevolence for all of the various aspects of living and loving that is the totem for all of the key points that make We All Belong so retro glamorous and that make them the most genuine dogs they can be. The 40th anniversary of the Summer of Love (assuming the capitalization here) came and went this summer, a mood and attitude that Dr. Dog doesn’t illustrate outwardly, but certainly endorses in its mentality. It was the spring, summer, fall and winter of Dr. Dog, mostly because of they gave us something to live for – a collection of stories that emphasize that it’s not all about gold and shit, it’s about grabbing that tiger by the thick, ropey tail and letting it drag you some. It’s about getting up on the right side of the bed and not worrying about the fool manning the strings of the marionette doll. It’s about cherishing the song and what put it into your throat that day. Good work Dog.

What this here said about this album back in the earlier of the year:
“Death is a valuable tool for making living sweeter, just as salt is used on tequila and limes are used with Coronas, and Dr. Dog – though they aren’t real doctors – prescribe both ideas in large doses on We All Belong, the group’s full-length follow-up to Easy Beat, a hazy snack of impeccable, sundried offerings that are rarely timorous, but instead exhibit so much hot-bloodedness that it’s easy to discern that they choose life over lingering on what will be. There’s a lot of old soul feeling to what they do, as if they were young men filled to the lashes with the spirits of thousands of mild-mannered grandfathers, who’d experienced all of the 50s and 60s as young men, with fires in the pits of their stomachs and unwrinkled skins. It’s as if they’re on both the front and back ends of lives – with the youthful swagger and exploratory gene as well as the realization that days are numbered and the time’s ripe for reflection and kicking and screaming before kicking the bucket.”

Daytrotter’s Best 15 Albums of 2007
15. John Vanderslice — Emerald City
14. The National — Boxer
13. These United States — The Forest and the Garden
12. The Teeth — You’re My Lover Now
11. Dr. Dog — We All Belong

Dr. Dog Daytrotter Session
Dr. Dog Official Site
Park The Van Records

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Thanks for such a nice article!! My nephew is the drummer for Dr. Dog….We (our family, friends, and fans)..all love these great, laid back, fun guys and fully support their music.

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