The Runners Four

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Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 56:13

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One of the best

timmy

This is an album that I return to every so often and continue to find things to like. It covers a wide range of moods. Twin Killers is great post-punk poppy fun; After the Deluge alternates between dreamy acoustic reverie and intense, huge arrangements; Rrrrrrright has jazzy drums under caustic, biting guitars, and the entire song eventually melts down and is rebuilt. Those are a few of my favorite songs on here, but when I listen to it I rediscover other songs, too. It's fun, creative, exhilarating, and calming, all in turn, and it's absolutely worth your time.

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Found this in a bargain bin?!

nazardesign

This is a great album. Full of amazing pop hooks...and quirkiness.

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Quirky and poppy

EMUSIC-0066743E

First off- these guys are great live. See them. The height imbalance on stage is curiously endearing to me...don't know why, but it is. This might be one of their most approachable albums for someone seeking an introduction. The are just quirky enough... time signatures are just out of place enough, and the syncopation is just weird enough whilst retaining the pop goodness. The 4 song run "Twin Killers" -- "Running Thoughts"-- "Vivid Cheek Love Song"-- "O'Malley, Former Underdog" is my favorite part of the album.

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They Say All Media Guide

After seven albums’ worth of gleeful pandemonium, Deerhoof calm things down a bit with The Runners Four, a collection of songs that are even more restrained than Milk Man and the Green Cosmos EP. Perhaps trying for the unpredictability of their earlier work got too, well, predictable for the band. Even though the manic intensity that characterized work like Reveille is missed a little here, The Runners Four is still a far cry from typical indie rock; in fact, it sounds more like one of Deerhoof’s older albums played at half-speed than anything else. Most importantly, the joyful creativity that radiates from all of the band’s other work is here in spades, too: it’s hard not to smile at “Twin Killers”‘ zigzagging riffs or “Scream Team”‘s giddy, girl-boy vocals. At the beginning of the album, there’s more of an emphasis on pretty, relatively gentle songs like “Chatterboxes,” “Odyssey,” and “Vivid Cheek Love Song,” although even these tracks have enough shifts in tempo and dynamics to prove that they’re the work of Deerhoof. However, as The Runners Four unfolds, it gets progressively louder and more overtly playful, with “Spirit Ditties of No Tone,” “Lightning Rod, Run,” and “O’Malley, Former Underdog” providing some of the album’s most irresistible moments. By the time “You’re Our Two” and “Rrrrrrright” close out the album, Deerhoof are back to the sugar-buzzing rock of their early days. In between these extremes are the pretty pop of “Running Thoughts” and noisy, experimental cuts such as “Midnight Bicycle Mystery” and “Bone-Dry,” which recalls the more elliptical moments of Deerhoof offshoot Curtains. While it’s not as clearly conceptual as Milk Man was, The Runners Four also seems to tell an extended, if fractured, story involving murderous twin beauties, spies, pirates, and smugglers. There’s a lot to look and listen for in The Runners Four; it’s Deerhoof’s longest, most eclectic work yet, and more proof that the band can expand its sound without losing what makes it special. – Heather Phares

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