Romanian Names

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (115 ratings)
Romanian Names album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 37:17

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my favorite JV record

mwingerski

I think this album shows JV progressing vocally more than any other album I've heard. He relies less on studio tricks on more on great melodies, vocal delivery and songwriting. I love pixel revolt too, but i think this is my favorite.

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Needs to revolt some more

DJAmbient

My intro to JV was Pixel Revolt which I was amazed with and still play regularly. Romanian Names has the telltale melodies but musically it is not as interesting - maybe even over produced in the arrangements. It just sound to lush and safe and missing some of the quirk and drama that made Pixel Revolt a standout. I'm sure with more listens more than a few of the tracks will grab me though I want something more Revolting!

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The Company It Keeps

MrBibichon

I give this collection four stars rather than five only because it follows what I think are two of the best albums of the past ten years ("Pixel Revolt" and "Emerald City") and is just a shade less strong than those two. Still, this is much more compelling music making than 90+ percent of what's out there, and John Vanderslice deserves all the attention he can get. This is the best-produced record of his career (JV with Scott Solter again joining him at the board) and the sound and arrangements could not be better. Those close-mic'd strings on 'Hard Times' just slay me. Download this, but download the others too.

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Best in a while

MikeandMichelle

I have to agree with the other reviewers - this is his best and most cohesive album in a long time. It's a bit of a shift, but it's also a huge step forward. Every time I listen to it, I'm stunned. Too Much Time, DIALO and Summer Stock are the standouts IMO, but the whole album is incredible. Give it a shot, and let it grow on you.

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Worth Your Time

Simple

The approach is more relaxed than his earlier records, yet somehow the writing seems more thoughtful. The ideas are more secure, the words and melodies drop in just about the way you'd expect from Vanderslice... but a bit prettier and more sophisticated than almost anything new I've heard in a very long while. Highly recommended for fans of long players, tune smiths or vacations.

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Better than last 2 records

CosmicBob

This album sounds a lot like Vanderslice's previous 2 efforts, but manages to move past his fixation on 9/11, terror, and war, which somewhat weighed upon the prior 2 records. His previous subject matter was powerful and made for moving music, but not necessarily something I would want to listen to frequently. He continues to achieve a very distinctive sound and voice on his records. He still traffics in neurotic imagery that fill minor-keyed, character-driven songs, but the subjects are more diverse. I liked DIALO (simple, so catchy it can be annoying), Tremble & Fear, C&O Canal, and Carina Constellation, but really all the tracks are good. This guy deserves a bigger audience.

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They Say All Music Guide

John Vanderslice is nothing if not consistent. He’s never made a bad record, and although his idiosyncratic songwriting and production have only grown more confident and compelling with his last several releases, neither has he made one that is truly, unabashedly great. Romanian Names does little to change any of that, news that should be at once heartening, slightly disappointing, and ultimately entirely unsurprising to his followers. A couple of minor, outward things are different this time around. After six albums on Barsuk, Vanderslice has jumped ship to the increasingly eminent Dead Oceans imprint. He’s also decided to shake up his writing process by hammering the songs out in a new basement studio at home before fleshing them out at Tiny Telephone, his usual HQ. Songwise, the results are subtle and few: save perhaps the sprightly, hummable “C&O Canal” and a pair of lovely ballads, “Too Much Time” and “Hard Times,” these numbers aren’t discernibly more direct or immediate than prior efforts. The album’s sound is a typically Vanderslicean mix of inventive chamber orchestration, dappled electronic overtones, and scruffy acoustic indie pop guitars, a step back from the mildly more organic orientation of Emerald City to the variegated textures of Pixel Revolt, though in keeping with both of those albums’ gentle, accessible veneer. In terms of the lyrics — always a crucial factor with Vanderslice — this may rank as his most oblique work, and not merely because the liners, atypically, lack a lyric sheet (although that could be taken as a clue to his intent). His familiar character-driven approach is largely intact, but the details are sketchier than usual, with few clear narratives emerging despite recurrent references to fraught romantic exploits, loss, violence, memories of summertime, and isolation in wilderness settings. The lack of specificity can be refreshing, with simple chorus phrases and potent, isolated images (notably, of fetal horses galloping in the womb) taking the place of involved story lines. Too often, though, the songs just feel enigmatic and empty. Aside from “Fetal Horses” and the several standouts mentioned earlier, there’s strangely little here to hold on to, lyrically or otherwise, making Names an oddly evasive, impenetrable listen, even if only one song — the repetitive and slightly grating “D.I.A.L.O.” — comes close to being unpleasant. Not great then, though not bad, Romanian Names holds the unfortunate and surprising distinction of being the very first John Vanderslice album to feel like just another John Vanderslice album. – K. Ross Hoffman

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