Cranes

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Cranes album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 38:45

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New and gladly familiar

JTM--EMUSIC-00C2F3E3

I found these to be more beautiful Cranes' pop songs. This album is pretty mellow and easy listening. In that way, it's different than mid-90s Cranes. And while there are more electronic instruments now than previously, I would not consider this "electronic", electronic noodling is not the focus (thankfully). The focus is still simple pop melodies and Alison's voice. These simple elements are the core of all the songs. Guitar chord progressions or simple electronic piano melodies lead the path for Alison's fascinating voice to explore. -J_Tom_Moon_79

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They Say All Music Guide

Continuing to explore the generally subtler side of their music in a new century, Alison and Jim Shaw extend their increasing interest in electronic music on 2008′s self-titled effort, as was readily heard on Particles & Waves, into an even more refined approach. Keyboards are ultimately the lead instrument throughout much of the album, which in combination with Jim’s drumming still holding a sense of restrained, looming power, and Alison’s familiar vocals now sweeter than they have yet been, create something close to a new Cranes sound altogether. It’s certainly no radical reinvention — piano has been a lead instrument for Cranes as far back as “Tomorrow’s Tears” in 1991 — but as a steady evolution, hearing the near-Beach Boys haze and swirl of the arrangement on “Worlds” and the sense of hidden depths on “Collecting Stones,” it’s a quite striking blend of past and present. It’s not that guitars have completely disappeared, certainly, but often they are presented as extra shading or a sudden alteration of a performance. “Wonderful Things” is perhaps the most classically Cranes song in the older vein, but in a calmer mode, the guitars providing rhythm more than anything else. Elsewhere, “Feathers” is almost a post-punk tribute of sorts, thanks not only to the guitar but the very New Order-like bass, while “Move Along” is another standout on a fine album. – Ned Raggett

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