We Have Sound

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 39:04

eMusic Review

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Kendel Ratley

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Tom Vek, We Have Sound
Label: Startime International / Vagrant

Tom Vek is young: 23 years young, debut album recorded in his parents 'London garage young. Youth grounds We Have Sound, but it is not necessarily an innocent record.

The album is defined by its raw, anxious and unprocessed sound (see: garage), matter-of-fact lyrics and a collection of mostly declarative song titles (see: youth, before blacks and whites fade to grays). His immediate surroundings — love, fame and post-adolescent/pre-adult ennui — inform his songwriting. Though much more bare-boned, this direct, even abrupt, approach is reminiscent of contemporary and fellow countryman Mike Skinner of The Streets. Vek is world-weary in a way only twentysomethings can be; though his voice often sounds sardonic and remote, the electro-pop beats, rhythmic repetitions and insights that pepper his straightforward expressions reveal a pervasive and infectious energy. No matter how tired he gets, there's always room for one more car ride, one more party, one more love song.

In all of its lo-fi glory, We Have Sound — loyal to but different from both rock and electronica — is a collection of found noises cobbled together from Vek's musical forbearers. He draws obvious inspiration from Television, P.I.L. and Talking Heads (the latter being most apparent on “Nothing… read more »

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Pretty good but...

Bille

Its alright, given the choice of giving up this album and getting my 10 downloads back, I would probably keep the album...just. BUT, 'Nothing but Green Lights' is probably my favorite song of last year. Simple, but wonderful, wonderful song.

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Original, catchy, cool

KfuMike

I'll have to side with the bloke from across the pond... This is a great album. My favorite, “I ain’t Saying My Goodbyes” sounds like a cross between Cult Hero (The Cure circa 1977) and the Minneapolis band 12 Rods.

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Absolutely amazing

HonestIsaac

Despite being minority interest even in his native England, and this being his debut album, Tom Vek is something else. A lazy comparison for his eclectic mix of rock, hip-hop and electronica would be Beck (which nicely also rhymes), but there is a distinctiveness about Vek that sets him aside. I have seen him live twice now, both times he frickin' rocked despite an unassuming smirk and little to no pomp, and both times his humble confidence in his music was justified - Tom Vek is an amazing songwriter with a depth unmatched by most traditional guitar-based singer/songwriters. Hmmm, if you want to know what to hear to sample him before getting the full album and falling in love, try 'I Ain't Saying My Goodbyes', 'CC (You Set The Fire In Me)', 'Nothing But Green Lights' and the astounding 'That Can Be Arranged'. Trust me, he's vekkin' brilliant.

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They Say All Media Guide

A brash mix of indie rock and dance, Tom Vek’s debut album, We Have Sound, manages to make this fusion of styles sound organic instead of opportunistic. Having explored and experimented with alt-rock in his early teens and electronica as he neared his twenties, Vek knows both styles inside out, and his incorporation of both into his own music feels completely instinctive. Vek recorded We Have Sound in his parents’ garage on an old reel-to-reel recorder, and he gets a remarkably “live” feel on his recordings, especially considering that he’s essentially a one-man band. The louder songs, such as album opener “C-C (You Set the Fire in Me),” sound like they were recorded in concert or at a party, creating an interesting tension with the more polished electronic atmospheres that dominate later tracks such as “On the Road.” Vek has been compared to LCD Soundsystem, Beck, Bloc Party, and the Rapture, but the main similarity between him and these artists is that they’re all unafraid of playing with rock and electronic idioms until they come up with their own styles. Although “The Lower the Sun” does sound a little bit like Beck attempting to make Odelay on a Stereopathetic Soul Manure budget, “I Ain’t Saying My Goodbyes” puts more emphasis on the “punk” part of dance-punk than Bloc Party could. However, with lyrics like “Cover”‘s “It’s your Stanley knife smile cutting into me” and the elastic song structure on “A Little Word in Your Ear,” Vek shows that he’s a confident enough songwriter to put his own spin on these sounds. We Have Sound isn’t perfect: some of the songs, like “If You Want” and “If I Had Changed My Mind,” still sound unfinished and unfocused and a little too close to garage-made demos. And even though Vek mixes electronic and rock elements fluently, sometimes his application of dance’s elongated, loopy feel to indie rock sounds just ends up sounding repetitive. Still, when Vek is capable of songs as good as the slow-building buzz of “Nothing But Green Lights” and the lovely, not quite folktronica ballad “That Can Be Arranged,” it’s easy to forgive some of We Have Sound’s more awkward moments. This is a strong debut from an artist who just needs a little more focus to be brilliant. – Heather Phares

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