Strange Geometry

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 41:48

eMusic Review

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J. Edward Keyes

Editor-in-Chief

08.10.06
Clear, clean and immediate, the Clientele blow away our fog every time.
2005 | Label: Pointy Records / state51

You'd be forgiven for not identifying the Clientele as a pop band. Up until this point, the UK trio seemed a little ashamed of that fact themselves. For the last eight years they've played a perverse game of duck-and-cover, smothering their crystalline choruses under layers of dense haze that blurred the edges and made the melodies feel muted and indirect. There's a honey of a heartbreaker buried somewhere in the band's 2000 single "(I Want You) More Than Ever," but the band hid it so far under a bushel of reverb that it would take a medium with a divining rod to find it.

The Clientele blow that fog away on Strange Geometry, their cleanest, clearest and most immediately winning effort to date. It's fine and good to emulate Felt's cumulonimbus pop, but eventually even Felt caved in and made the crisp and coherent Forever Breathes the Lonely Word. The Clientele seem perfectly at ease following suit. The music is still spare — the group's echoey guitar patterns are fleshed out only by flourishes of violin — but there's a beauty here that has eluded them in the past. "My Own Face Inside the Trees" is brisk and jaunty, like the… read more »

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One of my favourite two albums...

DJAlchemi

...of this millennium, so far.

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I totally agree

music4thesoul

the Clientele are just really really good - every song is perfect every note every syllable sublime - all the wannabees should listen to the Clientele - why oh why does no one rate them???

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WHY dont enough people know them

Hrpufnstuf

This is an absolute stunner of an album,every song every chord shimmers beautiful voice.These are one of the greatest bands and so few people know them just shows the people who run the business know nothing,even the spoken track song,losing Haringey nearly gets me to tears,I can almost smell London.If you like Luna,Galaxie 500,you must download this.

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They Say All Media Guide

Rebounding after the ever-so-slightly samey feel of The Violet Hour, Strange Geometry reinvigorates the Clientele’s literate, wistful indie pop with fresh doses of emotion, invention, and wit. As the Arthur Machen quote in the album’s liner notes suggests, Strange Geometry is as much about London as it is about introspection and lost love: virtually every song on the album makes characters out of the tenement lines, gardens, trees, streets, and buildings that make up the city. In fact, these songs are so thematically tight that they resemble a collection of poems and short stories set to music, particularly on the largely spoken word “Losing Haringey,” a breakup note to London with wonderfully evocative lyrics like “I was in an underexposed photo of 1982.” All kinds of clever and experimental details decorate Strange Geometry, from the distant, operatic vocals that introduce “K” to the guitar melody that quotes the Crystals’ “Then He Kissed Me” on “Since K Got Over Me.” Fortunately, though, these extra bursts of creativity don’t distract from the essential beauty of these songs. On both livelier tracks like “My Own Face Inside the Trees” and “E.M.P.T.Y.” (which boasts bubblegum-psych string flourishes and fuzzy guitars) and immaculately groomed ballads like the soft, sweet sadness of “(I Can’t Seem To) Make You Mine” and “Step into the Light,” the Clientele have rarely sounded better. Despite a few sleepy moments on the album’s second half, Strange Geometry has more flair and movement than Violet Hour, and perfects the band’s ability to be uplifting and heartbreaking at the same time. – Heather Phares

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