Mine Is Yours

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (133 ratings)
Mine Is Yours album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Cold War Kids (See All Albums by Cold War Kids)
  • Date Released: Jan 25, 2011

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Alternative

  • Label: Interscope

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 44:28

eMusic Review 0

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Craig McLean

eMusic Contributor

01.14.11
Cold War Kids turn in a scorching, uplifting set worthy of their ambitions
2011 | Label: Interscope

In August 2008, Cold War Kids played their biggest-ever event: the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Colorado. At the Denver Broncos' Invesco Stadium, Barack Obama was officially selected as the party's candidate for the forthcoming Presidential election before an ecstatic audience of 84,000. Elsewhere during the four-day showbiz-politico hootenanny, Cold War Kids played on a bill that included Jenny Lewis, Zooey Deschanel, Sarah Silverman and Shepard Fairey — creator of the iconic Obama "Hope" and "Change" posters. At the time the four-piece band — alumni of a Christian college — were promoting their second album, Loyalty To Loyalty. Its title came from the writings of Josiah Royce, a late 19th-century philosopher and proto-socialist from California. Their website proclaimed their enthusiasm for author David Foster Wallace. "The biggest objective Wallace wants to get across is to turn away from a style of writing that is ironical and sarcastic," singer Nathan Willett told me, "and point towards a much more genuine and sincere style of communication. A lot of people have talked about that with Obama — from his mannerisms to his speech, he's a very sincere guy, a genuine character."

Clearly, Cold War Kids nurse lofty ambitions, but little of their smarts… read more »

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LAME ALBUM--Theme songs for shows on the WB

HELENSKALA

CWK used to be so great...so gritty and genuinely filled with soul. This album is akin to shitty arena pop. It sounds like the likes of Jason Mraz and gang had a hand in this album. A total cheesy bummer.

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Good stuff

bluespeck7

Not as good as their previous album, but still an awesome listen.

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Waste of a download

skerry00

Generic, polished "here we come radio." Disappointing...

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arena rock schlock

dresseddown

this album is pure arena rock schlock. generic hook after generic hook mixed with plenty of cringe-worthy lyrical moments. they look the part, sure, but the music is lame. who's buying this?

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Kings of Hootie

indiesoc

I've never cared much for CWK, finding their songs lacking ideas and the singer a little overdramatic. Last year's EP gave me pause, however, with "Coffee Spoon" becoming a favorite song of 2010. Sadly, on this album Mr. singer has shifted to full-on overdramatic, and I detect a bit of Hootie or that Kings of Leon joker in his corporate-sounding pipes. The songs themselves also have some ridiculous MOR flourishes, making this album a tedious listen.

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A Turn for Pop

circusflea

Following the lead of KoL. Mostly ambitious, overpolished pop tunes. I'd give it a lower rating if there weren't a few gems like "Cold Toes..."

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Delete Disappointed1963

joeyjojojnrshabadoo

Could someone please delete Disappointed1963's account and the SPAM he's left on every page of this site? Thanks.

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Good, but worried

twoxvols

From first listen, the album is rather enjoyable. The songs are well-polished and carry a good beat. That is the problem. CWK were known for their unique style including crazy songs like, "We used to vacation" and "Against Privacy". While they still have some of that edge sound in some of their songs, the themes are much more common like love. I am worried that they are taking the same trek as Train who went from their first album which had some really good moments to being a punch line of jokes. I agree that everyband does not have to make the same album and they can and should tweak around a little, but if they continue on this path, they may fall down the down the same slippery slope of fame that so many before have done. Cross your fingers that the real CWK will re-emerge next album.

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Their "Big Moment" Album

CatharticBullets

I really like this album, I think this is the one that'll probably launch them into a household name status, kind of like when the Kings of Leon did it with Only by Night, except I believe this is a much better album than that one. It's a very big album, think Joshua Tree, in the sense that it explores the space but while also utilizing the production value of a big name producer. I thought the Santa Ana Winds EP, especially Coffee Spoon, was so good and thought it might go more in that vein, but I'm not too disappointed. If you want to pick and choose I'd say go for Royal Blue, Mine is Yours, Louder than Ever or Cold Toes on the Floor.

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Cold War Kids

By Elisa Bray, eMusic Contributor

Back in 2006, Cold War Kids set the blogosphere alight with the stripped-back blues-indie numbers "Hang Me Up to Dry" and "We Used to Vacation," sparking a fierce record label bidding war in the process. In the run-up to the release of their debut album, Robbers and Cowards, the California quartet was hailed as "the new Radiohead." The hype eventually died down, as hype does, but their fanbase has grown steadily. A former English teacher and… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Some major retooling took place in Cold War Kids’ world in the 12 months between the Behave Yourself EP and their third album, Mine Is Yours. Their last full-length, Loyalty to Loyalty, played like an unflattering caricature, all dragging tempos, grating vocals, and overdone attempts at “bluesiness.” Behave Yourself found the band on better behavior, with tighter songwriting and a sleeker approach, but just how much slicker Cold War Kids sound on Mine Is Yours is still kind of a shock. Where they used to sound like they wanted to play church basements and speakeasies, here they sound like they’re gearing up for stadiums à la Kings of Leon. Aside from Nathan Willett’s occasional vocal flourishes, the band puts aside any vestiges of its former rawness, coating everything in clean, glossy reverb that makes these modern rock songs go down easy. They’re downright U2-ish on the title track, and “Skip the Charades” and “Flying Upside Down” aspire to anthem status. Every now and then, Cold War Kids remember their roots on Mine Is Yours, as on the sexy “Cold Toes on the Cold Floor” and “Royal Blue,” both of which conjure the slinky nighttime grooves that used to be their bread and butter. For better or worse, this album is polished and mature — words that never would have described Cold War Kids’ music before. – Heather Phares

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