Yellow House

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (1579 ratings)
Yellow House album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 50:00

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Andy Battaglia

eMusic Contributor

Andy Battaglia writes about music and culture of various other kinds from a home base in New York. His work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Wire, t...more »

02.23.09
Gorgeous, pastoral folk mini-suites made with widescreen imagination
Label: Warp Records

Grizzly Bear's second album Yellow House made big waves when it was released in 2006 but, curiously, nothing about it rates as immediately striking. The songs are long and laconic, slow and dirge-like, laced with the kinds of identifying marks that seem to privilege a sense of mystery over mission or melody.

All of that, however, is precisely what gives Yellow House its impressive staying power. "Easier" starts the album off with a brief snatch of flutes and horns, which herald the entry of gently rolling parlor piano and some studiously picked acoustic guitar — all the makings of a decorous folk sound that scans as too meticulous to class exactly as "freak folk." Don't be fooled, though: Grizzly Bear is plenty strange. The smeary harmonies draped over "Lullabye" and the ghostly reverb of "Knife" suggest the kind of songs barely remembered from dreams (or, in the case of the latter, movies by David Lynch). And all the peculiar excesses of Grizzly Bear's ornate sense of craft evoke the totally strange Van Dyke Parks, whose work on the Beach Boys 'Smile and his own albums like Song Cycle always seems close at hand. It's the kind of music that you might… read more »

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Terrible

MartinChilders

Why do people like this. What a bunch of boring rubbish.

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Get A Clue, Folks!

Nyabinghi

In an age where the single has become the downloaders choice, Yellow House stands as an anomaly. If you have a greater than 5 min. attention span this recording will reward you over and over. It is so dense that it takes a few listens to process it. The production on this is so sublime, I can't think of another release of late that can compare. The sound is fully organic and evocative. And c'mon, that video to Knife is great!

user avatar

Some excellent songs...

mikemos

...and some boring ones. I just don't think the album keeps it's strength up. I think the 1st third is great, and Knife is awesome. But, as it continues it fails to hold my interest. Don't get me wrong, I understand the amount of work that went into this album, I just don't care very much.

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Quick Question !!!

Hoofprints

Quick...name an album more boring than this one. See! I knew you couldnt do it. Since when has "indie rock" meant "music produced by the mentally ill"? These guys should get a gig playing in a funeral home. That would make death seem not so bad, certainly better than listening to this swill.

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Yellow House!

greg6711

Fantastic album, smooth and easy to listen to while working on other work. Very atmospheric and unusual.

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I guess I just don't get them

n63108

After all the feverish hype about this band, I've given this many a listen and still.... Outside of "Knife" and "Central and Remote" the rest is simply...aimless. While it's apparently uncool not to love them, reviewer Bazarov says it all for me.

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Good stuff

EMUSIC-019E3BC8

I like this almost as much as the 2008 Fleet Foxes record. Nice, mellow tunes. Listened to it on my Dallas-Tokyo flight and wish the batteries on my iPod hadn't died so I could listen again.

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So beautiful it renders me incoherent

robynblocker

This is the one and only album out of my hundreds that puts me into a meditative state. Nay, lemme rephrase that. This is the only THING on earth that puts this tense ball of nerve that is 'me' into a meditative state. Something about Yellow House puts me in another place. That's all I can say. Once I swear I nearly left my body while listening to it, and I'm far from believing that's even possible. The album drips like honey, stings like pain, and shifts like light. Close your eyes. Don't listen to it with them open.

user avatar

they must be nice guys....

belakoe

Very slow moving, not nearly as melodic as I have been told they were, they certainly take great pains to hear themselves breathing. Very lackluster, very incoherent as a listen.

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They Say All Music Guide

On their second album (and Warp debut), Yellow House, Grizzly Bear takes a dramatic leap forward, delivering a collection of songs that sound awe-inspiringly huge and intimate at the same time. While the album is overall more polished and focused than their debut, nowhere is this (literally) clearer than in Yellow House’s production. Though the artful lo-fi approach Grizzly Bear used on Horn of Plenty — which sounded like it was recorded on tapes that had been moldering away in musty cupboards, or gradually dissolving underwater — was extremely evocative in its own way, Yellow House’s warmth, clarity, and symphonic depth gives Grizzly Bear’s widescreen psychedelic folk-rock a timelessness that makes it seem even more dreamlike and unique. The album’s structure and songwriting are much more focused, too, even though many of the tracks hover around five to six minutes long. Instead of presenting their experiments as fragments and snippets, as they did on Horn of Plenty, on Yellow House Grizzly Bear incorporates their ideas into pieces with natural, suite-like movements. “Central and Remote” moves seamlessly from fragile marimba melodies to acoustic guitar-driven verses and towering choruses. The best moments not only have a natural sound, but conjure up nature imagery as well: “Easier” opens the album with a gently exciting buildup of woodwinds, banjo, and acoustic guitar that could soundtrack the dawn of a late summer morning, while “Colorado” closes Yellow House with wide expanses of vocal harmonies and mountainous tympani. In between, there’s more majestic beauty to be found, particularly on the gorgeously hazy love song “Knife,” which combines lush Beach Boys harmonies with a little bit of the Velvet Underground’s chugging cool. Elsewhere, “Plans” feels like a more brooding take on the High Llamas’ intricate, symphonic/electronic pop, while “On a Neck, on a Spit” recalls Jim O’Rourke’s freewheeling deconstruction of folk-rock and soft rock. However, these similarities feel more like allegiances than tracing over the work of these artists — Yellow House is a beautiful album in its own right, and required listening not just for fans of Horn of Plenty, but for anyone who enjoys ambitious, creative music with an emotional undercurrent. – Heather Phares

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Activity

  • 05.18.12 If you are in NYC you have to see "Kindness" at Poisson Rouge, he's on I'm about an hour and def worth it! Come join us!!!
  • 05.17.12 Today we finish mixing the new album! !!! !!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!
  • 05.10.12 UK! We're coming out to play! Get tix now: Cambridge / 28 Aug (http://t.co/GfwKRLmv) and Nottingham / 29 Aug (http://t.co/SaiqFyPC)
  • 05.08.12 September 27 we play @PygMusicFest! Tix on sale tomorrow 10 AM CST: http://t.co/85RU73Av
  • 04.26.12 Real close now #newalbum
  • 04.22.12 I forgot to tell you I'm over at @edwarddroste , oh wait I told you. But you should know the facts again
  • 04.07.12 I know it's not follow Friday but you all should follow @GBearGalore , they literally know more about us than we do!