Person To Person

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (95 ratings)
Person To Person album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 39:34

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Best of 2009

Huxo

Every song on this album is good, and some of them are incredible ("Vacationing People", "Blood Oranges", "Lion's Share" and "Early Warnings"). Maybe song number 6 should've been replaced with the outtake song "Wander Aimlessly", which you can find at Stereogum. Nevertheless, this is the best album of 2009 and unfortunately not enough noticed.

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Upbeat, melodic indie

BadScooter

Some really good songs here. "Vacationing People" may be my personal anthem for the summer of 09. Good catchy, rhythmic, upbeat indie rock.

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Some say "anthemic" I say jangly and fun.

nazardesign

This is a fun, guitar-driven indie rock album. Think Mystery Jets and Orange Juice. The resulting sound is jangly, but polished with smart lyrics. I imagine they must be quite a good pairing with friends, Grizzly Bear in concert.

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They Say All Music Guide

That Foreign Born love all shades of things bright, open, and at least partially U.K.-inspired, can be heard from the opening song on Person to Person — “Blood Oranges” has soaring guitar, emotional vocals courtesy of Matt Popieluch, a thick and swooning charge, and a sense that the band’s record collection — or iTunes playlist, depending — contains a fair amount of familiar suspects past and present, like U2, the Chameleons, James, Interpol, Snow Patrol, and more besides. But Foreign Born aren’t simply a cover act for Post-Punk Tribute night, and whether it’s other borrowings — such as the clattering drums by Garrett Ray on “That Old Sun” that recall the equally compelling start of the Beach Boys’ “Do It Again” — or a general spirit of élan on the peppier numbers like the slickly charging “Can’t Keep Time,” there’s a lot of spirit evident throughout Person to Person. Its high point might be the mantra/hoedown of “Winter Games,” giving Ray in particular another chance to shine with a strong performance that carries the song as a whole. This all said, Person to Person is a pleasant enough listen rather than a gripping one, somewhere between enjoyable inspiration and careful exercise, a flavoring in the general indie rock milieu of the early 21st century that, for the moment, can have no greater impact. Another album might be able to provide their breakthrough, but for now, Foreign Born are in a holding pattern, and looking good while doing so. – Ned Raggett

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