Another One Lost

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (26 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 49:28

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Great

IANWISCH

I will admit I love Radiohead and this album has its similarities, regardless it is a great album. If you dig the mix of rock/pop/electronica of Radiohead and your searcing for more this a great alternative. They still have their own sound as well.

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Holds up to repeated listening

cweekly

The biggest knock on (or, depending on your perspective, praise for) this album is its clear debt to Radiohead. There's no mistaking the similarities in vocal timbre and the general feel of the sound. But regardless of how you feel about RH (personally I'm a fan), put that aside for a moment and just listen to this recording in its entirety. You might be surprised (as I was) how well it does in its own right. Turn it up a little louder, the guitars rock, the drums and synths drive the songs, the lyrics and singing and dynamics and songwriting are cohesive.... Some albums have good songs. To me, this one is a work of art from start to finish and bears repeated listening. Highest recommendation.

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excellent

ChrisKillian

this is a very very very very very very good CD. highly recommended! favorite songs: bliss, i was wrong, say something, her, burr. in reality, all of them are good.

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They Say All Media Guide

With Another One Lost, Lake Trout moved further into the Radiohead-cleared ether, bending the drum’n'bass and electronica influences of Alone at Last into a more modern rock aesthetic. The resulting 13 tracks are beautiful, minimalist explorations of richly subtle proportions. Like their work mimicking electronic music in a live setting, the band relies on repetitive loops and interesting sounds to meticulously build up stark emotional landscapes. There is a sense of momentous inevitability about nearly all of the songs featured on the record, vocalist Woody Ranere’s voice alternating between a Thom Yorke-like whispered falsetto and a more plain half-spoken earnestness. The band’s choice of loops — such as gently deteriorating notes from Ranere at the bases of both “Her” and “Still” (where it sounds positively Hawaiian) — is effective throughout. Mike Lowry’s propulsive drumming, which moves for the first time into ambient textural work on several tracks, is also a key to the band’s success, with songs like the explosive “180 Bliss” reminding the listener that, even in their apparent restrained melancholy, the band is still capable of incredible force. – Jesse Jarnow

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