the bestest
a modern masterpiece.
Total Tracks: 11 Total Length: 44:10
a modern masterpiece.
The song Gila might be their best on this very special album.
I got teen dream first, and love it, downloaded this next, and will be picking up the first one too! Love track #9, but they are all great. I think the reviews saying Teen Dream is their "rock " album are a little off, but I love these guys.
On their fourth album Bloom, Alex Scally and Victoria Legrand present a stronger picture of the overcast dream-pop aesthetic they've maintained since their 2006 debut. And, much like an abstract painting, Teen Dream's glossier older sibling offers plenty of mystery. It features some of their most obtuse verses ("You build yourself a myth/ And know just what to give") and some of their darker narratives (In "Wild," the young narrator recalls living with a drunk… more »
Whether you're happily married or told Cupid to shove it a long time ago, we can all agree on one thing: to quote the one-and-only Nazareth, "Love hurts/ Love scars/ Love wounds/ And mars." Or something. That's why we went ahead and compiled a list of 36 Songs To Soothe the Pain, from the bloodletting confessionals of Neko Case, Bright Eyes and Sunny Day Real Estate to the melancholic melodies of Sigur Rós, the Shangri-Las… more »
[eMusic Selects is a program designed by eMusic to give exposure to unsigned or undersigned bands. This month's selections are Strand of Oaks and Family Band] The arresting, winter-bitten folk songs of Family Band feel like dispatches from some older, crueler place and time: a typhoid-wracked 18th-century town, perhaps, or a medieval village gripped by witch trials. In reality, it is the project of two latter-day Brooklyn expats — Kim Krans, a visual artist, and her… more »
No offense to eMusic's previous Selects artists, but I get the sense that the only one of the bunch that could become a genuine pop star is one Randolph Chabot. Under the name Deastro, Chabot writes the sort of pop songs that make you swoon - and then wraps them in a hyper-colored gloss of synthesizer sturm und drang. M83 is a reference point for Keeper's, his eMusic Selects release, but it's not quite accurate:… more »
With Devotion, Beach House prove once again that they’re one of the more strangely named bands around. Their music is so lonely, so haunting, that the only beach house it evokes is a deserted one, stranded on a winter night so desolate that summer isn’t even a memory. Then again, that atmosphere is precisely what made Beach House’s self-titled debut so striking, and Devotion is even more so, since Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally bring more focus, depth, and warmth to their unmistakable sound. Tracks like “Gila” and “Turtle Island” show that all the pair need to build a mood are their vintage-sounding drum machines, keyboards, and layers of Legrand’s womanly, velvety voice, but Beach House spend just as much time expanding their horizons as they do delivering their definitive sound. Devotion begins with “Wedding Bells,” which, with its fuzzed-out guitar, keyboard filigrees, harpsichords, and pedal steel, is one of the duo’s most elaborate songs yet. It’s also one of Beach House’s most immediate, fully formed songs, something that this album has far more of than the band’s debut. “You Came to Me” is a stunner, melding dark chamber pop ambience with lyrics that feel like they came from a surreal ’70s AM radio hit. “Heart of Chambers” is downright soulful, with Legrand’s keening voice and swelling organs giving it a truly devotional cast. Not surprisingly, given the album’s title, Devotion’s songs deal with love and loyalty, or the lack thereof: “Some Things Last (A Long Time)” is an aptly torchy, country-tinged ballad about carrying a torch for someone; “Astronaut” pines for a crush to be requited, filtering the innocence and drama of girl group pop through the band’s gauzy approach. “Home Again” is just as sweet — but not nearly as reassuring — as its title suggests, setting lyrics like “Something about the way a heart is nailed above a hand” to finger snaps and a melody with a wintry sparkle. Like Beach House, Devotion sounds like it was made for, and possibly in, the dead of night. This time, though, Beach House’s dark moods have more shades, and even a little bit of light, making them all the more compelling. – Heather Phares
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