Population

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (115 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 53:50

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I like the other one better

tokers

I like ...And the Ever Expanding Universe a little bit more but you can really appreciate that album a lot more by listening to this album. This album has better album art though so if that's your thing then you should get this one, but if that's not really your thing then your decision is a little more difficult. Do you like the show Extras? I do. You should watch that then decide which album you want.

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I Love Toronto

SonicDoom

Yet another great album from the KC Accidental/Broken Social Scene/Do Make Say Think/ uber cool music mecca. Continues the quality music trend. Fresh, fun, happy. Not a masterpiece though. Where did that come from?

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Solipsism

Katrina

DL'd this because it had a song with "Solipsism" in the title. Time will tell if it was a good choice.

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Don't listen to Pitchfork on this one

kungfudrummer

Fanatastic record as far as I'm concerned. It got mastered a bit too loudly is all. Great drumming and percussion (always a plus for me), and the talent and musicianship are obvious plusses. So good - love the latinesque instrumental too. Get it!

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Achingly Beautiful

deafened

This is one of my favorite albums of all time. Every time I listen to it, I feel like I've been swept away to some unknown land where pretension and bravado have been replaced by quiet reality. Stunning and indeed achingly beautiful

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I like!

topothamornin

I has taken a couple of listens to fully appreciate all that is going on in this sometimes "busy" album. There are some stellar anthem moments and some great percussions, which do get a bit too much at one point, but overall very impressive jazz undertones. With a bit of tweeking and a tad more focus these folks may produce a masterpiece, but I wouldn't call this a masterpeice, just a very solid album.

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Special

CANTBELIEVEIMPAYINGFORTHISCRAP

Yeah, what they said. I'd be careful throwing the word "masterpiece" around, but this record is definitely something special.

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Masterpiece

outono

It is true, this album truly is a masterpiece - a contender for the best album of 2007. If you like The Anniversary, Stars, and Anathalllo, then get this.

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Pretty much the best thing ever

travisstevens81

This band has progressed a ton from Underwater Cinematographer. Population is like a Frankenstein of Sunny Day Real Estate, The Postal Service, and The Anniversary. I really like "Why So Looking Back?", "Sherry and Her Butterfly Net", and "Career in Shaping Clay", but there are plenty of gems on here. Check out their album, Phages, if you like this.

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all tracks

lobsterboy

Looks like all the tracks are available to me, anyway. Checked the tracklisting against the A&C website.

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They Say All Media Guide

At this point in time in the new millennium, Toronto rock might as well be considered its own subgenre. The success of the Arts & Crafts label and the group Broken Social Scene (and artists like Feist, Amy Millan, and Kevin Drew) has cemented the sound and idea of the city in the minds of indie rock fans across North America, even the world. The second full-length by the Most Serene Republic only helps to confirm that this is no fluke. Sporting intricately laid instrumental parts, none of which stay consistent throughout an entire track, anthemic, sometimes obscured or impenetrable male and female vocals, and an aggressive rhythm section, Population is a record that refuses to sit and meditate upon one particular thing for too long, instead approaching a theme (both musical and lyrical) from as many different angles as possible — and never directly — as if in an effort to circumscribe an idea rather than defining it tidily. In “Present of Future End,” for example, dynamics rise and fall, guitars enter and exit, horns burst and fade away as singers Adrian Jewett and Emma Ditchburn trade off lines about the effects of technology on relationships. “When the talking involved mouth not hands,” Jewett reminisces, while Ditchburn counters later with the sweetly melodic, singsongy “Take my voice, please do what you want with it, chose like a mouse with click.” Clearly delineated verses and choruses are eschewed for rolling, sweeping phrases that, despite their occasional lack of focus, carry listeners along on the journey and are never boring. Even the instrumental selections here — the Brazilian jazz-influenced “A Mix of Sun and Cloud,” the pastoral opener “Humble Peasants,” and the dramatic Italian cinema-inspired “Agenbite of Inwit” — are engaging enough in their musical diversity that they just add to the overall ambiance of Population, that kind of caught-in-the-moment feeling you get when you realize the album’s already done and you don’t know where that time went. The kind of offering that proves the Most Serene Republic’s place in not only Toronto rock, but in indie rock itself. – Marisa Brown

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