Looking Through Leaves

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (11 ratings)
Looking Through Leaves album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 37:03

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quiet and engaging

GiuliaGulia

down tempo full or rich textures and sultry voices. Good for my art...

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Still The Wrong Song!!!!

theHollywoodPimp

Yeah, It is still the wrong song, and I also emailed customer service weeks ago. Lets get on this eMusic. I had to buy the song from iTunes for 99cents.

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Still The Wrong Song!

Michaelt987

I emailed customer service weeks ago about the error (songs 4 and 5 are the same song ... song 5 is missing). Still no fix. They should at least remove the song until it's fixed.

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Good album but Download error

EMARBE

Track 4 and 5 are the same song. Track 5 with Grant Lee Phillips is missing.

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They Say All Music Guide

Those who listen to a lot of electronic pop music have been conditioned to wait. When you hear a track that starts off gauzy and ambient and possibly soft-headed, you wait a couple of minutes: is it all going to explode into a headlong rush of crazy breaks, or suddenly be bolstered by a framework of thumping house rhythms, or will its plush texture slowly be nibbled away from the edges by glitches? Or will it just stay gauzy and ambient and possibly soft-headed for eight or nine minutes? Composer/producer/remixer Carmen Rizzo’s third album under his own name teaches you quickly not to assume that you know what’s going to happen. Although his female guest vocalists are all strangely interchangeable (all offer a variation on the cool, breathy lounge tone that goes so nicely with soft, warm electronica), the tracks themselves are nicely varied stylistically and most offer a rich if often sharp and spiky sonic palette. The best tracks are the most texturally adventurous ones: “Through the Storm,” with its delicate layers of electronic percussion atop a plush carpet of multicolored synthesizer washes and caramel-colored basslines; “Passing By,” with its spaghetti Western guitar tone and fine vocals from January Thompson; “We’ll Fly,” with its strangely martial beat, pleasingly crunchy tone, and unusually cool and detached vocals from Josey. When he errs it’s on the side of wimpiness: guest vocalist Grant Lee Phillips is wasted on the overly soft “Bring the Mountain Down,” and “Until You Find Another” floats ethereally and nicely enough, but for too long. The album does hang together very nicely as a whole, however, and even the tracks that tend to bog down offer consistently pleasant listening. – Rick Anderson

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