Gold and Green

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (84 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 53:15

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Thrilling, effervescent, fun!

cottser

I would love to see these guys (girls) live. What a great album. Looking forward to checking out their other stuff, but from what I hear this is their best! Look up this album on Amazon or similar to get the correct track names (a few are incorrect here).

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Sporatic and expansive

senatorbobdole

Totally huge, inspiring, wonderful, and wild. It feels like rolling down a grassy hill into a fantasy world. I love this cd a lot, and it leaves enough for the imagination. I would love to see them live. Love, love, love it.

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Surpasses the Boredoms

MDavignon

Blissful psychedelia, avant-rock madness, and all the good stuff of 70's progrock, updated and without the pretense. OOIOO is now my favorite rock band.

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completely awesome

goofy

Who's been keeping this album hidden from me? I've been wasting my life. This is like one of the coolest things I've ever heard.

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whoa

duggie

blew my mind man. right now my favorites are grow sound tree and mountain book.

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They Say All Media Guide

The stateside release of OOIOO’s albums has been somewhat confusing, to say the least: Thrill Jockey issued their third album, Gold and Green, four years after its predecessor, Feather Float, was released domestically, and a year after the album that followed it in Japan, Kila Kila Kila, made its U.S. debut. Muddled time lines aside, Gold and Green is another winning album from the OOIOO collective, which this time expands to include Sean Lennon and Yuka Honda. A series of shorter pieces open the album, with tracks like “Moss Trumpeter” and “Tune” mixing harmonica, synthesizer, wind chimes, and cuckooing flutes in a typically playful, refreshing fashion. “Grow Sound Tree” and “Mountain Book” are the album’s fittingly named epics, both with a majestic ebb and flow that suggest natural wonders. The chanting and punchy drums on “Ina” and “Unu” emphasize the group’s witchy, tribal side, while the frantic funk of “I’m a Song” and the surprisingly glamorous “Emeraldragonfly” reinvent pop as only OOIOO can. Gold and Green may be the band’s most approachable album, but as with all their releases, it’s a charming reminder that experimental music doesn’t have to sound like it was hard work to make. – Heather Phares

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