The Garden

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (51 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 44:00

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7 nation army

tw13ve

is available on the compilation album Unfold Presents...tru Thoughts Covers here on emusic. Why does emusic have rights to distribute it there but not on the actual album its taken from?

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"electronic?"

Muse8

Categorized as "electronic"? Sounds like acoustic jazz to me. Maybe it's all done with samples, but the results hardly sound electronic.

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Get all of his stuff

Murahachibu

This guy is great! The sound quality of his mixes is superb. Love the bass.

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Missing Song!??%%#@???

phoneticsound

I haven't even downloaded this album yet - I was stoked to find the cover of Seven Nation Army, having heard it before - one of the best covers ever, period!- and it's unavailable!!! so, emusic, please add Seven Nation Army, and i'll probalby download the whole album!!!

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Here's a medical test

derhmanino

Listen to the sample Changes and if you do not download it immediately, go to the doctor because you must have some problem with your ears!

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Abolutely fantastic

benmhall

This is one of my favourite eMusic finds. Great grooves, interesting arrangements and instrumentation. Be sure to check out Cheney Lane, though they're all this good. If I was going to cut one track, it would be Seven Nation Army, as it doesn't flow as well as the others. This album was a wonderful find. This kind of thing is why I signed up to eMusic, Here's hoping that they add more.

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They Say All Media Guide

The difference in spirit between Ben Lamdin’s first and second Nostalgia 77 albums is tipped off by their titles. While 2004′s Songs for My Funeral was fittingly downcast, The Garden is instead saturated with bright, vibrant energy. They’re quite dissimilar in setup as well, with the debut’s hip-hop roots exchanged for a combination of programming and actual live humans creating groove-driven jazz indebted to a range of recordings from the late ’50s through the ’70s. Any given cut, save for a thick, neck-winding take on the White Stripes’ “Seven Nation Army” (featuring Alice Russell, a vocalist who stomps all over fellow Brit Joss Stone), is likely to fool the average jazz head into thinking it was waxed at least three decades ago. When filed alongside the likeminded releases by Yesterday’s New Quintet, Quantic, and Cinematic Orchestra, The Garden will have no trouble holding its own. The sleeve artwork ironically looks a lot more like Rhythm Corps’ Common Ground than Don Cherry’s Complete Communion, so don’t be surprised if a half-awake record-store clerk puts the disc in the “R” section. – Andy Kellman

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