The World Won't End

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (203 ratings)
The World Won't End album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:05

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Beautiful Pop Album

EMUSIC-004B00B8

This is a beautiful album. Joe Pernice has an achingly, beautiful voice that matches his melancholy lyrics and excellent musicianship on this album. Working Girls and Bryte Side are just great pop songs. This is one you should download.

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Pernice is a genius

MammothMan

This is the place to start if you have no prior knowledge of Joe Pernice. This is perfect pop played perfectly. I can say without hesitation that this is one of my 5 favorite albums of the decade.

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really good, but lacking something...

thelastleaf

This album is super polished with catchy melodies, but after many listens, it seems kind of vanilla and lacking a bit of depth. It's one of those albums that you immediately recognize the melody, but for the life of you, can't remember the name of the song.

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Exemplary Pop Record

feelinstevie

This album shimmers and shines from beginning to end. Joe's voice serves his best collection of songs beautifully.With the possible exception of Prefab Sprout's 'Two Wheels Good'(i.e.'Steve McQueen'), you would be hard pressed to find another guitar driven pop record that is as damn near impossible to turn off mid-song as this one.And that's about the highest praise I can think of.

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Straight forward, and often perfect

ayupmeduck

No surprises here. Traditional song structures. Mainly mid-tempo. You'll probably feel like you've heard it all before, but often the shear quality of the song-writing will prove irresistible and you'll spend days, perhaps years, blissfully singing along. Try "Our time has passed" as a sample.

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Pure Unadulterated Pop Genius

SpaceBruce

I am what you might call a music junkie. I have a CD collection that is nearing (if not over) the 1,000 mark, a comparable vinyl collection and now a 40gb iPod that's almost completely full. Of the albums I own, there are very few I would consider to be "perfect" albums. This is one of them. Start to finish, this album is catchy, literate guitar pop that is as good the 100th time as it was the first. I got the chance to meet Joe Pernice about a year ago, and it didn't diminish my view of him in the slightest. He is a warm and intelligent guy who also happens to be one heck of a singer/songwriter. Any & all albums related to him are suggested, but this one's my favorite thus far.

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They Say All Music Guide

So maybe Joe Pernice isn’t crazy. He spent his time between the release of the Pernice Brothers’ Overcome By Happiness and The World Won’t End by issuing Chappaquiddick Skyline and Big Tobacco under separate aliases, claiming that the material on those weren’t from his top drawer and that the good stuff was being saved for the second Pernice Brothers record. Most listeners just rolled their eyes, figuring it to be yet another case of a musician’s eccentricities and inability to recognize their own talents. After all, those “interim” releases did more than merely maintain fan attention; they might not have been as polished or perfected as Overcome By Happiness, but they were chipped from the same precious ore. So here’s the payoff, proving that he was being accurate after all, if a twinge modest. With much of the support from Overcome staying on board with a couple of relative newcomers (this lineup has been in place over two years), The World Won’t End is every bit on par with its predecessor, if not an improved effort thanks to the increased importance of those Pernice surrounds himself with. This is a record made by a band, not a singer/songwriter aided by seasoned session hands. The sound is as lush, melodic, and clean as ever (not sterile), with sweet arrangements standing at the polar opposite of lyrics dealing with sinking relationships and pesky emotional ghosts. This is all-purpose pop; you can hum merrily along to the melodies or sink yourself in the lyrics and wonder where everything went wrong. Or both. Regardless of where you’re at, you won’t lose sight of Pernice’s voice, one that most vocalists would cross the river Styx to possess. Most indicative song title: “Endless Supply.” That seems to be the case. – Andy Kellman

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