Zootime

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (59 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 48:26

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What a surprise

deafened

This is one fantastic disc. I was sold on the 80s-ish sound of "Diamonds in the Dark", but there's so much more here. Sometimes fun, sometimes dark and sometimes just downright weird. This is surely one of the best of 2009 so far.

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Fabulous

ecru

I just adore this album. I have listened to it countless times since I got it a couple of weeks ago, and I'm still not tired of it.

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fun?

Stick-Up-Artist

I believe this is what is known as fun. The single is "You Don't Know Me Dennis."

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They Say All Media Guide

Other than Spirit and the Spanic Boys, father-son duos are rare in rock & roll, which gives the U.K. experimental rockers Mystery Jets a leg up right away: lead singer and keyboardist Blaine Harrison is the son of lead guitarist Henry Harrison. It’s handy that they have a hook like that for reviewers to latch onto, because it can be difficult for listeners to get their head around the band’s full-length debut on its own terms. Zootime is filled with quirky, interesting pop songs, but each seems to be in a different style from the others. For example, “You Can’t Fool Me Dennis” sounds like an early, Barry Andrews-era XTC song as covered by Franz Ferdinand: the danceable stomp of the rhythm section keeps the spiraling tune from shooting off in a dozen different directions at once, but only just barely. Meanwhile, the first single “Zoo Time” has the cracked, disorienting post-punk-psychedelia vibe of a classic Teardrop Explodes single, but given an extremely contemporary electronic edge. Then there’s the handful of songs that recall Kate Bush and/or Atom Heart Mother-era Pink Floyd. Honestly, none of it makes a lick of sense, but unlike, say, the Beta Band — whose entire shtick was that the parts of their music never fit into a coherent whole — there’s a shapeliness to Zootime that suggests the record was constructed from some inscrutable blueprint that’s just naggingly out of reach. [Zootime was constructed using 9 songs from the band's UK release Making Dens and three others (including the energetic romp "Scarecrows in the Rain") taken from singles and EP releases]. – Stewart Mason

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