In Our Bedroom After the War

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In Our Bedroom After the War album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 55:48

eMusic Review 0

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Peter Parrish

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Canadian indie-poppers protest at the barricades of love.
2007 | Label: Arts & Crafts / IODA

Mid-2007 turned out to be a bountiful time for Stars fans. The collective remix project Do You Trust Your Friends? arrived in May, and two months later — well in advance of its CD version — came the follow-up to 2005's indie-pop feast Set Yourself On Fire.

For much of In Our Bedroom After the War, vocalists Torquil Campbell and Amy Millan appear to be channelling the liberated, emotional excess of the Romantic poets, invoking a sense of willful abandon which tinges the record with glee. Even as keyboards ring sadly and voices tell of relationships on the brink, it still feels as though someone, somewhere is getting their carefree kicks — as if our Canadian wordsmiths are waltzing at a lakeside retreat, revelling in the sensations they've unleashed.

When they're not rushing headlong at tragic lovers, surging choruses goad the group towards the barricades, into the rioting fray. Lines of conflict, both escalating and resolved, contribute to the central conceit of dizzying highs and lows. Even the gentle, horn-flecked sway of “My Favourite Book” hints at this duality — driven by devotion, but also invigorated by the wider knowledge that heartbreak could be just a page away.

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Absolutely beautiful

lmdw

I love this album! It was my first introduction to Stars and I am amazed every time I listen to it. The stories told are beautiful, the entire album takes you on a ride and the haunting vocals will stay with you long after.

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A grower

timabouttown

For over a year, I just couldn't get past what a let-down this was for me after Set Yourself on Fire. Giving it some space on its own, though, it's pretty wonderful (or pretty and wonderful). I'm glad I came back and read some of the other comments here -- the record makes much more sense to me when seen as a musical, or a pop opera. It hangs together really nicely. Ambition is GOOD, and I enjoy seeing someone swing for the fences. Not quite a home run -- call it a bases-clearing double. Most other bands should be so lucky.

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EXCELLENT

mes6890

Such a unique album. I don't have any others that really compare or are similar...it's just a great break away from anything you're listening to these days. Always refreshing, no many how times I've listened.

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Tres bien

fonger

The album is an excellent followup to Set Yourself on Fire. If the latter finds at its centre the theme of lamentation - owing to failed or unresolved love - In Our Bedroom chronicles the various aspects of love and its necessary and perpetual tie to destruction, hence the title track, The Beginning After the End. Love takes on various guises. From the calm, composed analysis of My Favourite Book to the frenetic, raw passion of The Night Starts Here to the cold, impersonal singles ad of Personal. It is a celebration of modern love - the Saturday night fuck, of obssessive lovers, of the loneliness of existence and enigma.

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Of man and woman

Panco

The vocal interplay between Campbell and Millan is the hook. Each song becomes a dialog of dramatic proportion. An intimate conversation that you are listening in on from across the room. Beautiful. Check out Midnight Coward.

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Great band!

rowleyj

This album is the first I've heard by the band and I love it! I can't find a song on here that isn't great. I really like the nice mix of male/female vocals. Perhaps that is why this album never gets boring. That and some great songwriting. The hint of electronic is a very nice touch and really gives this band a unique sound. Having never heard their other albums, I can't say if this is their best, but it's definitely a good place to start.

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Hey, Merfa from Ireland!

KfuMike

If you stop drinking so much Jamison and act like a big boy, then and only then can you come out of your "Time-Out" and get back some of your downloading privileges! This is an awesome album and it the hands of inebriates it could be dangerous...

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Amazing

elleon_on

i love it....very well put together nice story when listened to in order

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Not available

Merfa

"We're sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (Ireland) at this time. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause." Anyone know why? All the others are available...I am not too happy!

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yes please!

joshua1eight

at first listen, I was somewhat disappointed. but at second listen, I liked it. and at third listen I was hooked! most of the record is well crafted, catchy, Stars goodness, except for "Personal". I hate that song and it gets worse every time I forget to skip past it, but I quickly forget how bad that song is when I hear the songs that follow.

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They Say All Music Guide

In Our Bedroom After the War may prove that Torquil Campbell would be better off orchestrating Broadway show tunes instead of playing the part of an indie pop frontman. The titular song that ends Stars’ fourth album is a heavily layered theatrical production laced with birds singing and bells ringing as Campbell’s relationship culminates with a choir of voices and a massive symphonic crescendo. Campbell and crew are striving for a bigger-is-better formula, watering down the majority of their rock sensibilities with heavily layered chamber pop and this makes for a mixed bag. While some of Stars’ best songs appear on this record, others are performed with such an overstated bravado that it renders them too sour to digest. “Personal” is a character-driven melodramatic ditty that chronicles a protagonist who places a newspaper ad and is stood up because she is too obese. Two schmaltzy piano ballads feature Campbell delivering his best imitation of Morrissey covering Elton John, in a manner of campy crooning that could easily be interpreted as pomposity. With the exception of those decadent stinkers, and a few mediocre numbers, Campbell and Amy Milan churn out some of their best work and harmonize soothingly throughout. One of their most instantly catchy singles “Take Me to the Riot” capitalizes on a snappy hook vaguely reminiscent of Ned’s Atomic Dustbin’s “Grey Cell Green,” and sits well alongside the candy-covered Rhodes and orchestral flavored breakbeat of “My Favorite Book,” which could fit on a greatest-hits record by the Cardigans. The themes of sweet, sweet lost heartbreak are still evident, and the enhanced sheen makes the material sound more like contemporary easy listening music than ever. Since the group is on the Arts & Crafts label (home to Broken Social Scene), they can still be described as indie, but they’re just barely holding on to that credibility. While it wouldn’t be surprising to hear Set Yourself on Fire while shopping at Urban Outfitters, this album seems ideal for The Gap. As a whole, the band sounds tighter than ever, and if they continue down this road, and keep inflating their production like a balloon, there’s a danger that they could easily go pop. Until then, keep your head up, there’s no need to reach into their back catalog just yet. [Also released with bonus tracks.] – Jason Lymangrover

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