Akron/Family

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (263 ratings)
Akron/Family album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 60:52

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this is such a great album..

waynoss

..i tried to tell my friends but they wouldnt listen so i'll try telling you. Theres some great albums that slip under the radar and this is one. Moody melodic inventive once you find where its at you love it. Lumen what an amazing song.

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a nice surprise

geoffb

one of the great albums that I found purely by chance - I love the energy of this album; very hard to define but very good to listen too!

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Wonderful

kidb

A beautiful, organic melding of folk, pop, and even experimental electronic at times. The entire album is solid, but to sample, download "Before and Again" and "I'll be on the Water".

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In My Top 10…

bensch

…of all time. Yes. Probably the most underrated record of 2005. Their music transcends categorization. And the live performances are something else entirely.

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Straight to the skull

mwsiegle

This debut isn't perfect, but that makes it all the more engaging. When it's hot, it's hot. Fractured and fractaled electro-folk is interspersed with sonic bric-a-brac. Harmonious vocals veer toward ecstatic. And the band manages to eschew preciousness. If you like this album, go see them live and get your head blown.

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I wish I was related

hoboghost

Ok, so they aren't related by blood. But who cares, the music is beautiful. They mix mellow folk sounds; synthetic melody and whir; and honest, emotive, occasionally slightly-off-key vocals with creative song structure. The end result is compelling and original, (unlike the phrase "compelling and original" in album reviews, but really it works here). RIYL: The books, Dios, The Castanets.

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They Say All Music Guide

Akron/Family’s self-titled debut for Young God has its share of opaque psych-folk weirdness. After all, each of the Brooklyn band’s four principal members receives a “bric-a-brac” credit next to the more conventional listings for guitar, piano, melodica, glockenspiel, and percussion, and unidentifiable noises have a way of splattering suddenly across the album’s plaintive acoustics. “Part of Corey,” for example, is two minutes of tape splicing and hiss before a gentle ballad rises above the wind noise. This penchant for matching squelchy electronics to analog instruments will land them immediately with a New Hippie tag, if their beards don’t do it first. But the quartet isn’t limited to that sound. They integrate it with an indie rock aesthetic (Flaming Lips, Palace), and songs like “Italy,” “Afford,” and “Before and Again” are plucky, even mostly catchy, and having that bit of structure takes Akron/Family a long, long way. It’s not off-putting when the twining, weeping guitars in “Afford” suddenly start alternating with heavy reverb and field recordings of birds — if anything, the experimentation makes the song stronger. “Lumen” is another highlight; it begins with whining cellos and shifts to a stilted British folk sound before becoming something closer to orchestral pop. “Running, Returning” is strong, too — with its melding of animalistic percussion, layered voices, pleading melody, and hints of electronic noisemaking to the lo-fi aesthetic, it’s a pretty solid primer for the record’s overall feel. – Johnny Loftus

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