Welcome Back Dear Children

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (26 ratings)
Welcome Back Dear Children album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 42:05

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topothamornin

This album has really grown on me as it has great breezy-folk moments that are nicely accompanied with all out rock jams that display heavy guitar distortion. They seemlessly slip from 60's pysch-folk to modern rock jams and all of this features great falsetto lead vocals and harmonies.

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Check this out!!

Toaster-Strudel

Wow!! I can't believe this is on here. Download this album. It has some fantastic musical parts, the songwriting is top notch. I am predicting these guys will be the next big indie hit. This is there first album and I found out about them through "iguessimfloating.blogspot". As soon as I heard a few sample tracks off of myspace I emailed the band and had one sent to me. This is a fantastic bargin. It is impossible to find this album in shops and it must be ordered from the internet to my knowledge. If you are into dense, richly orchestrated indie rock then this is something that you should check out.

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They Say All Music Guide

Arizona, the Brooklyn-based trio of Benjamin Morris Wigler, Nick Campbell, and Alex Hornbake, are capable of rocking out, as they demonstrate on such tracks as “Somersby” and “Splintering” on their full-length debut album. But the musicians are more comfortable creating more lighthearted pop fare, crafting melodic, inventive arrangements of guitar, bass, drums, piano, and cello with shifting tempos and modulations, all to accompany the fey, high-pitched vocals singing contemplative lyrics. In the crowded field of indie rock, Arizona are unusual in their ability to carve out an identifiable sound (one noticeably influenced by Ray Davies and the Kinks) that draws not only on rock, folk, and pop, but also on classical elements, a sound of considerable charm. As with the psychedelic pop/rock of the Sgt. Pepper’s era that this music references specifically, there is a childlike appeal and a delicacy of feel. This sort of thing easily can become too precious, but the musicians of Arizona know when to add some rock grit to keep their musical soufflĂ© from collapsing in on itself. – William Ruhlmann

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