Oneida Road

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (22 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 35:40

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Oh, this is SO much better than M. Ward!

chickenfoof

Go about five miles past Son Volt (and wave at what Jay Farrar's career COULD'VE been as you drive past, please), make a left at (the more serious side of) Eddie From Ohio, then hit the gas, because this is CRUISING music. Smart, sensitive, rip-yr-heart-out cruising music. One of the three best albums of 2006. (The other two being Yo La Tengo's I Am Not Afraid of You and I Will Beat Your Ass and The Scattered Pages' Lazy Are the Skeletons -- I STILL can't decide which one I like best.) http://burninglight.motime.com/post/665484

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Beautiful Album

False45th

If you like the warm textured sounds of M. Ward, you'll love this album. Try "No One Called You a Failure" or "Top of Your Head" or "Ash Wednesday".

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Long Awaited

VegetableFarmer

For those of us in the know, this album has been a long time coming. I'm happy to report that it is well worth the wait. World...meet the Kamikaze Hearts. Kamikaze Hearts...well you already know the world. It's hard to pick out a standout track, but early bets for me are 'Ash Wednesday' and 'No One Called You a Failure'. Just download them all.

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They Say All Media Guide

For about the first minute of Oneida Road, it’s easy to gain the impression that the Kamikaze Hearts are just another alt country-folk unit with a tasteful blend of acoustic instruments and percussion. After the first minute of “Top of Your Head,” though, things turn eclectic, electric, and quirky (in the best sense of the word). The Kamikaze Hearts are Bob Buckley, Nathan Giordano, Matthew Loiacono, Troy Pohl, and Gaven Richard, though the liner notes do a poor job of identifying the roles each person plays within the span of the disc. The fresh arrangements create an immediately striking listening space on Oneida Road. The minor-key “Defender,” for instance, has a prominent mandolin, heavy percussion, and the lead vocal has been run through some sort of processor, creating something akin to an acoustic Led Zeppelin fronted by Ian Anderson. The odd lyrics of “Half of Me” and “Wolfert’s Roost,” which aptly match the band’s musical palette, are delivered with an emotional intensity. It would’ve been nice to have a lyric sheet to sort all of the words out, but perhaps that would rob the music of some of its mystery. Oneida Road is fairly short at 35 minutes, but what of it? Thirty-five minutes of intriguing, tuneful music is better than a long disc with lots of filler, and if the listener wants more, he or she can simply play the album again. – Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

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