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Centipede Hz

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (39 ratings)
Centipede Hz album cover
01
Moonjock
5:05 $0.99
02
Today's Supernatural
4:15 $0.99
03
Rosie Oh
2:56 $0.99
04
Applesauce
5:35 $0.99
05
Wide Eyed
5:00 $0.99
06
Father Time
4:34 $0.99
07
New Town Burnout
6:02 $0.99
08
Monkey Riches
6:46 $0.99
09
Mercury Man
4:19 $0.99
10
Pulleys
3:30 $0.99
11
Amanita
5:36 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 53:38

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eMusic Review 0

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Andrew Parks

eMusic Contributor

09.04.12
Tapping into a broadcast from the great beyond
2012 | Label: Domino Recording Co

The word on the street is that Animal Collective’s ninth studio album – yes, ninth – is a red-blooded response to the sunshine and puppy dogs of Merriweather Post Pavilion. Which is true in regards to its approach (bashed instruments rather than stacked samples) and overall vibe (wild and wooly), but it’s not like the group’s core quartet is back to baking batches of incoherent noise rock. To understand where they’re coming from this time around, it helps to first cue up the podcasts that Animal Collective leaked in the weeks leading up to Centipede Hz‘s release; namely Geologist’s set, which is based on an elaborate mix he made for producer Ben Allen before Animal Collective hit the studio.

“We put together a list of songs that either encompassed the overall sound and vibe, or just had specific things we liked, such as drums sounds, or vocal effects,” Geologist wrote in his Mixcloud notes. “For the final show of AC Radio we thought it’d be cool to play this inspirational mix and the album back to back.”
Sure enough, Animal Collective’s leading loop surgeon offers more than a few clues about the background of what’s initially a very bewildering… read more »

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Underwhelming

DC10

'Moonjock' and 'Today's Supernatural' are a pretty good 1-2 punch but it tails off after that. Panda Bear resumes being 'the other guy' to such a degree that 'Rosie Oh' could almost actually be a Colin Moulding song on a latter-day XTC album. 'Wide Eyed', featuring noted Kickstarter scoundrel Deakin's first ever lead vocal, may be AnCo's most 80s-sound track ever (and I mean that in a good way). 'New Town Burnout' and 'Monkey Riches' restore a little bit of momentum, but the set peters out toward the end. On the whole, Centipede Hz most similar to Strawberry Jam only the songs aren't as good and the overall sound is more strident.

user avatar

Just Okay

richard.watson8

This aint Merriweather Post Pavillion. With a couple exceptions (Applesauce, Today's Supernatural), the songs on this album just don't stay with you. I've listened to the album eight times and each time I reach Amanitas I can't remember any melodies of any songs that I just heard. The singles Honeycomb and Gotham (along with Today's Supernatural) were the best songs from the sessions.

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Wonderful stuff

sammycat

The single "Today's Supernatural" makes sense now. I am enjoying this step taken by Animal Collective. It doesn't sound like "Feels". really, but I'm experiencing the same sense of surprise and discovery.

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eMusic Features

0

Interview: Animal Collective

By Matthew Perpetua, eMusic Contributor

The four members of Animal Collective have spent the past decade building a sprawling body of work comprised of solo releases, experimental works and collaborative albums. Centipede Hz, their ninth proper record as a band, finds the group working again as a quartet after writing, recording and touring for their landmark album, Merriweather Post Pavilion, as a trio. In this conversation with all four members of the group – David "Avey Tare" Portner, Noah "Panda… more »