
| Side 1 - Track 1. Little Fur Things |
| Side 1 - Track 2. Kracked |
| Side 1 - Track 3. Sludgefeast |
| Side 1 - Track 4. The Lung |
| Side 2 - Track 1. Raisans |
| Side 2 - Track 2. Tarpit |
| Side 2 - Track 3. In A Jar |
| Side 2 - Track 4. Lose |
| Side 2 - Track 5. Poledo |
There's a funny story that's been doing the rounds since forever in US alternative rock - Sonic Youth went from non-plussed to self-declared fans of Dinosaur Jr in a matter of mere months and two live shows. What a difference a day makes (and, err, maybe your mood...). Either way, that early support helped invigorate at least some reappraisal on the latter's debut record, Dinosaur, which in retrospect was awesome but had failed to sell or garner much critical niceness. Returning with pretty much the same formula, You're Living All Over Me was the watershed moment for one of the most important guitar bands of the late-20th Century. Pre-grunging grunge, embracing noise, driving a propellant trajectory well away from anything like the mainstream, it set the aesthetic for a group that are pedestaled today as influential on a gargantuan scale.