Waiting for the Time To Be Right

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (69 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 44:04

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Exquisite slow-burning

Achilles

I had this album for a while before really listening to it. Then I became mesmerized. Then I listened to "Pet Sounds" one morning in the car and I cried.

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great album

mysoncool

I think The Brother Kite might be THE overlooked band right now. Lumped in with shoegaze bands (not that there's anything wrong with that!) I would say a better stepping off point might Band of Horses if they were from London circa 1990, instead of the American south. TBK are better than Band of Horses, though. They have another album under the name "thebrotherkite", also on emusic, which is also quite good. According to their MySpace, they have another album in the can, but no label, which is a huge injustice. This band should be huge.

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exceptional song craft

interestingnotdumb

this is a tremendous album! it reminds me of ride meets palesaints in a vague way i cannot describe probably the male vocals. the song "get on me" that melody transports me to a time in the mid 90s when i was dedicated to beauty and romance on adventures with friends on summer nights. i reccomend their website where you can retrieve the lyrics for this album, you can see a obvious message for believers. oh! can you hear all those guitars! wonderful! enjoy!

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This is really good.

Scott549

In addition to what's already been said, think of the Clientele, a little faster and a little louder, with some Posies thrown in. Excellent.

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Pet Sounds 2006?

sevenbaby87

This is an interesting album. It's shoegazer meets 1966/67 Brian Wilson. Pet Sounds goes down as one of the best albums ever, a CD that has had a non-stop presense in my "rotation" for 10 years now. So, as a result, I may be biased toward this type of album. But the medodies are inescapable, as the ghost of the former Brain Wilson fills your ears. Check out "Out of Sight," "Hopeless and Unsung," and "Waiting for the Time to Be Right" aka "I Just Wasn't Made for These Times, Part II," from Wilson's Pet Sounds.

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Agree with reviewer above

Wanderer

A nice sounding indie pop/rock band; try tracks 1-3 and Hold Me Down for a taste.

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Thanks KEXP! (90.3, Seattle)

mr.lightning

The math is easy: Slowdive + Beach Boys + My Morning Jacket = The Brother Kite. The results are not, which is a testament to this band. Check it out, they deserve it.

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They Say All Media Guide

It isn’t hard to understand why some folks believe that shoegazer/dream pop and power pop are incompatible. Power pop, for all its poppiness, thrives on rockin’ exuberance, while shoegazer bands (even with distorted guitars) are known for being dreamy, spacy, hazy, and surreal (sort of like the alternative pop/rock equivalent of a David Lynch film). But the Cardigans demonstrated that a band could be relevant to both alternative power pop and the shoegazer/dream pop aesthetic, and Lush maintained some dream pop overtones when they gave themselves a major power pop makeover in 1995 with their Lovelife album and the U.K. smash “Ladykillers.” So power pop can, in fact, be part of the recipe for shoegazers, which is what happens on the Brother Kite’s Waiting for the Time to Be Right. The more uptempo parts of this 2006 release drift into power pop territory, although the Brother Kite are a shoegazer band first and foremost — and their ethereal sound draws on influences like My Bloody Valentine, the Cocteau Twins, and early Lush as well as the Beatles (post-1965) and even the Beach Boys. Yes, the Beach Boys — as in ’60s surf rock. Brian Wilson and friends might sound like an odd influence to have if you’re a shoegazer band, but those “Don’t Worry, Baby”/”California Girls”-type harmonies are indeed part of the picture on melodic tracks such as “Lay Down Your Burden” and “Hopeless and Unsung.” Another thing that, from a shoegazer/dream pop perspective, is unusual about the Brother Kite is the fact that they have a male lead singer: Patrick Boutwell. From Lush to Shallow to Medicine to the Cardigans, most of the major shoegazer units have had female lead singers. But the Brother Kite are an exception, and Boutwell is a definite asset for the band on this enjoyable CD. – Alex Henderson

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