Elizabeth Cook "Great Television"
This item is a pre-order. Item will ship or be available for pickup NEAR the street date. Many items do not arrive at our store until the release date, so please expect that pre-orders will NOT arrive prior to release date.
For any orders that contain pre-orders, all items will be held until every item from the order is available to ship. If you want items in-stock shipped immediately, please place a separate order for those items.
ALL SALES FINAL ON PRE-ORDERS, RSD TITLES, SPECIALTY ORDERS & RESERVE ITEMS.
DESCRIPTION :
Great Television unfolds as a loose, emotionally driven narrative about navigating love, identity, and self-destruction against a backdrop of memory, movement, and Southern imagery. It begins with “Sunset Promenade,” where a deep, possibly lifelong bond offers comfort amid internal turmoil, establishing a desire for connection strong enough to withstand a restless mind. This sense of identity expands in “Girls of Atomic City,” where independence and womanhood are celebrated, though tinged with performance and uncertainty.
As the story progresses, songs like “Okeechobee Mud” introduce instability and intensity, portraying relationships that are passionate but corrosive, where love becomes inseparable from pain. “Thiokol Tripwire” honors the lives lost in the 1971 Thiokol Chemical Explosion and those affected in the south Georgia community of Woodbine. “Razorwire Wall” reinforces this devotion to chaotic love, suggesting loyalty even in destructive circumstances.
A turning point arrives with “The Easy Kind,” where Cook reflects on attempts at self-repair, acknowledging her contradictions and rejecting simplicity in favor of a more fractured self-understanding. This awareness deepens in “Caldonia and The Love Convoy” and “In Your Veins,” where freedom blurs into recklessness and love takes on addictive qualities, revealing her complicity in cycles of harm.
“19th Nervous Breakdown” provides crucial context, tracing her instability back to a turbulent upbringing marked by neglect and emotional disorder. “Feverfew,” leaves the narrative unresolved, as she recognizes her repeated attraction to destructive paths yet continues to follow them. In contrast, the closing track “Lightly” offers a rare glimpse of pure, protective sisterly love.
Altogether, the album portrays a cyclical journey of longing, damage, and partial self-awareness, where clarity emerges but transformation remains uncertain.
TRACK LISTING :
ALBUM FACTS :
* Please Note: due to the nature of vinyl manufacturing, actual vinyl color and effects may differ slightly from the product image shown. Color of Vinyl Subject to Change Without Notice.

