Paranoid Cocoon

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (126 ratings)
Paranoid Cocoon album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 41:11

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authentically soulful and weird

EMUSIC-01CE6DF9

I really really love this album... one of my favorites of the last few years. The vocals (including some beautiful male/female harmonies) are drenched with a country soul that you just can't fake, but the songs also have a haunting weirdness, maybe a little reminiscent of the silver jews, that is equally unfakeable. It sounds immediately familiar, reminding me of lots of other stuff I love, but at the same time is totally distinctive. Strong throughout, though my favorite tracks are 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 10. Significantly better than their follow-up, "tall hours in the glowstream," imo.

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authentically soulful and weird

EMUSIC-01CE6DF9

I really really love this album... one of my favorites of the last few years. The vocals (including some beautiful male/female harmonies) are drenched with a country soul that you just can't fake, but the songs also have a haunting weirdness, maybe a little reminiscent of the silver jews, that is equally unfakeable. It sounds immediately familiar, reminding me of lots of other stuff I love, but at the same time is totally distinctive. Strong throughout, though my favorite tracks are 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 10. Significantly better than their follow-up, "tall hours in the glowstream," imo.

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if you dig good music

judgeyal

you'll dig this. really. this album is great. seriously brings together a lot of great stuff. you won't be disapointed. you'll be surprised how much you'll end up listening to it

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Fantastic Find

im2tuf2die74

I heard a portion of a song off Paanoid Cocoon on Sirius. I downloaded the album and suprizingly found this 5 Star album. 2,4,8,10 are deffinitely the best.

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Dream Pop at it's Dreamiest

KittyCatastrophe

It's dreamy and dreary in all the right ways. There are moments when you can hear Jim Morrison crooning a Whiskey Bar tune, a good sing-a-long a la Serge Gainsbourg/Jane Birkin. Live, I even thought I heard some early 90's classics (think Dinosaur Jr./ Pavement) moments. Takes the place of Luna for calling it quits in my collection. All in all, it is a perfect summer album to lie drenched in whiskey and sunshine, with a smile on your face and love sick blues in your heart.

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anyone...

kietz

that doesnt love this album is probably the biggest loser on earth. Om det finns någon som inte tycker om den så hoppas jag att dem få ett dåligt jävla liv,

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A "Must Have"...

KrustyMonkey

I discovered Cotton Jones a few months ago and I gotta say, this was one of my TOP finds this year. It's super cool music. "Up a Tree" drips cool. Listen to it and you'll want to pour yourself a martini and wear a robe 007 style. Ya baby. Their other releases are equally as good.

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Leo and Nancy eat your heart out!

phillbert

Gosh this is awful purdy aint it?

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Wonderfully Weird and Cool

EMUSIC-00A98822

CJBR has perfected the sound of the male / female vocal - as good as anyone in recent memory. This album is strange in a very accessible way. It sounds like it might have been recorded in Nashville in the early 70's, left behind because it couldn't receive airplay and then resurfaced 30 years later. I love tracks 1,2,4,6 and 9.

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Don't need no beer

dmtunes

To enjoy this. A muggy southern twilight ride bathed in reverb for comin' down easy. Well worth the DL.

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They Say All Music Guide

Cumberland, MD-based singer/songwriter Michael Nau’s first full-length project since placing indie darlings Page France on semi-permanent vacation in 2007 trades much of his previous incarnation’s quirky pop leanings for a darker, weepy, reverb-drenched blend of Pacific Northwest, 1960s folk-pop, and Wilco-inspired heartland rock. If Will Oldham had gone the way of “Moondance”-era Van Morrison instead of the Grateful Dead for his metamorphosis into Bonnie “Prince” Billy, it may have sounded something like Cotton Jones’ debut long-player. Nau and fellow Page France expatriate Whitney McGraw drape their plain, heartfelt voices around Paranoid Cocoon’s ten tracks like a quilt on a smoldering fire, rendering each into a languid curl of smoke that practically begs for a gray, rainy morning, multiple cups of coffee, and a carton of smokes. The instrumentation is sparse, but the cathedral atmosphere keeps each note fluid — songs like “Some Strange Rain” and “Photo Summerlude” sound exactly as their names would suggest — even when the tempo takes the cruise control off, as is the case with opening cut “Up a Tree (Went This Heart I Have)” and the Donovan-esque, Haight-Ashbury rocker “Little Ashtray in the Sun.” Paranoid Cocoon establishes its sound early, so anybody initially put off by all of the cloudy skies and soft, neo-psychedelic mountain melancholy will inevitably come away disappointed, but fans of James Yorkston, Richard Hawley, M. Ward, and mild hangovers will eat this up, and rightly so. – James Christopher Monger

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