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Yoko

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (223 ratings)
Yoko album cover
01
A Man Like Me
4:29 $0.99
02
Landslide Baby
4:58 $0.99
03
You're Only King Once
3:10 $0.99
04
My Side Of The City
3:27 $0.99
05
Hovering
5:01 $0.99
06
Me And Jesus Don't Talk Anymore
4:51 $0.99
07
Fooled With The Wrong Guy
4:23 $0.99
08
Your Mother Loves You Son
3:05 $0.99
09
Don't Forget To Breathe
3:56 $0.99
10
Wipe Those Prints And Run
7:35 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 44:55

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Write a Review 6 Member Reviews

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Beulah in full bloom

Irish

I heard about Beulah through their connection with the Elephant 6 collective. I got When Your Heartstrings Break off of eMusic and liked it, although I didn't think it quite lived up to many other E6 bands. Then I got this album from the library and was blown away. Was this the same band? This album is darker, more mature, and its songs are longer, which is a pretty good bonus in my opinion. This was their break-up album, and it makes them the equals or betters to most E6 bands and something to remember.

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Far and Away Their Best

morganm

I had listened to Beulah on Rhapsody and knew I liked them, but I downloaded the first three and just didn't really love them. Finally got around to this one and remembered what I liked so much from before. The earlier ones are fine, but the whole ironic sunshine pop and horns is kind of weak in my opinion. Dark subject matter + happy music != clever. Anyway, this one is just plain good. Not clever, not a novelty, it's all good and very very replayable, and like most really good albums, gets better and better over the first ten or twenty listens. Don't get it because of something you heard about Beulah, get it because it's great by any standard.

user avatar

4 1/2

ThumbtackOnBroadway

Good, solid, multi-instrumentalist indie rock. You'll be singing along in no time. This is my first album by Beulah. I don't know if it really got me wanting another one, considering that I like the sadder (?) feel, and apparently this is the only one of that feel. But this is a really good find, and I recommend it.

user avatar

Sparer, Darker (Better?)

birty

The question at the end of this review title must be answered in the affirmative. In their swan song, Beulah abandons much of their light, poppy, happy sound for a darker, sparer tone. The trumpet takes a backseat. The "ba ba ba's" and the "la la la's" are much less evident. What replaces all of it is the music's congruency with Miles Kurosky's omni-present somber lyrical content. Before, the music was light while the themes were dark. Now, the loneliness and isolation of his lyrics is matched by the music of this near-perfect album. Beulah, in their last album, finally became a unified whole.

user avatar

good starting point

MrManFitz

(Tracks To Try: Hovering, You're Only King Once, Don't Forget To Breathe) I feel like this is Beulah's "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot": It's a bit of a challenge, it's a slight departure from their other music, and it works wonderfully as a self-contained album. I actually couldn't get into their other albums, but this one was on repeat for many, many weeks. Some great melodies and unexpected turns in these songs. One of the best of 2003. (MrMan's rating: 4/5 stars)

user avatar

eMusic's Description is dead-on

jorin

As a long-time fan of the band, I was a little off-put by the relative starkness and darkness of this album when it released, but if you can have the patience to settle into it, it brings a pretty intricate palette. It's beautiful, but sad, at times intense, at times very muted, altogether a very powerful album. It's a sidestep away from a lot of their other material, but the brightness of previous efforts is replaced with an equally magnificent sense of loved-and-lost depth. Great band, great album.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

There are a few things to be said about Beulah’s fourth album, Yoko. First, it’s not entirely wrong to wonder if the title itself represents the obvious — that famous lady who’s associated with things breaking up. Or it could very well be an acronym taken from the string-laced gem “You’re Only King Once,” but thoughts of heartbreaks and personal conclusions make Yoko breathe new life for Beulah. Some dealt with divorce during its recording and each member came to terms with accepting an “adult” way of life. Yoko is Beulah’s most mature effort and darkest material to date, not to mention the band’s bravest set. The sunny string and brass arrangements that made When Your Heartstrings Break and The Coast Is Never Clear so rich in texture aren’t done away with completely, although loyalists might beg to differ at Beulah’s decision to turn up the amps. Such a move shows how important it was for them to shed their twee pop style. Beulah is more than just a West Coast pop band. They have heart and soul in the vein of Wilco and the Flaming Lips, and that alone allows the beauty of Yoko to simply arrive. Roger Moutenot’s and Miles Kurosky’s shared production work is perfectly tailored to fit Yoko’s melancholic charm while polished guitar hooks carry the weight of such sentimentality, specifically on “A Man Like Me” and “Landslide Baby.” Lite pianos waltz with violins and woodwinds, adding to Yoko’s moody aura on the cathartic “Me and Jesus Don’t Talk Anymore.” Kurosky’s sincerity as a songwriter makes it clear that any kind of end doesn’t have to be bitter, and “Fooled With the Wrong Guy” embraces this notion. Yoko, regardless of its many connotations, finds Beulah at a time where the bandmembers are personally and professionally comfortable. A switch in approach and sound definitely worked for them, and fans shouldn’t be put off by Beulah’s toughened confidence. [The 2006 edition came packaged with an additional CD of bonus material.] – MacKenzie Wilson

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