Atlantic Ocean

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (59 ratings)
Atlantic Ocean album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 43:18

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Picks up where "...Letdown" left off

Kurzbein

Judging by the clips I'd say "Atlantic Ocean" picks up where "Dressed Up For The Letdown" left off. That's a welcome development as far as I'm concerned. I found his intervening releases too indulgent. Swift excels when he plays it straight and orients his songs around the piano. It's the sort of approach you don't hear too often these days, and it works really well for him. Good album.

user avatar

Diggin It

DJPolarbear

Fans of Mr. Swift's previous releases will not be dissatisfied. Leaving off at his last EP, "Ground Trouble Jaw"-most all of which is included here, Swift also folds in the sonic atmospheres of "Dressed Up For The Let Down" and also some of the experimental elements found in his previous release, R. Swift as Onasi". Overall sound production is improved. Give it a chance as the brief sound samples don't do it justice.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Genre-hopping Minnesota-based pop auteur Richard Swift’s The Atlantic Ocean is more of an “official” follow-up to 2007′s Dressed Up for the Letdown than the double shot of Music from the Films of R/Swift (under the pseudonym Instruments of Science and Technology) and the cathartic but nearly unlistenable Richard Swift as Onasis. Where the latter two releases felt like “Hail Marys” tossed into the musical ether, Ocean serves as a return to the kind of sharp-tongued, Beatlesque retro-pop that fueled 2005′s Novelist/Walking Without Effort and the aforementioned Letdown. This time around it’s the late Harry Nilsson who casts the largest shadow, especially on the hipster-slamming title track, which sets the tone for a string of “Martha My Dear”-meets-”Me and My Arrow” backbeats, comforting, timeless melodies, and lyrics that juggle biting satire and whimsy with startling acumen. The Atlantic Ocean also mimics Letdown’s tight, dry, and confident production style, trading the heavily compressed, wax cylinder coating that made Novelist feel like a Tin Pan Alley curio for a contemporary indie pop sheen that echoes the Swedish chamber pop of Jens Lekman and Sondre Lerche. It’s easily Swift’s most accomplished record to date, and while his center of gravity may reside firmly in the ’60s — closer “Lady Luck” sounds like a lost Motown session — it ‘s executed without a wink, a discipline that the current crop of retro-soul/R&B/glam rock/folk-pop grave robbers could benefit from. – James Christopher Monger

more »

Activity