The Seldom Seen Kid

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The Seldom Seen Kid album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Elbow (See All Albums by Elbow)
  • Date Released: Apr 22, 2008

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Alternative

  • Label: Geffen

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 54:37

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What an excellent album!

SexyLittleKitty81

95% of this record is great! The songs range from romantic to mischievous, and it's all very sexy! Might be my favorite elbow album to date! If you're just grabbing a few tracks, I'd recommend "Starlings", "Mirrorball", "Grounds for Divorce", "Audience with the Pope", and "The Fix."

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Welcome back, Elbow!

mirrorball

It's great to have this band back on eMusic, despite how terrible the current selection is. This album won the Mercury Prize in 2008, along with two Ivor Novello awards for "One Day Like This" and "Grounds for Divorce". The lead singer and lyricist of the band, Guy Garvey, has personally wanted this album to be sold as an entire piece and listened to in the same manner. I highly suggest paying respect to his own preferences, as the entire album can only be truly enjoyed if the listener listens to it in its entirety. This entire album spans various genres and is their most accessible album to date. If you enjoy this, be sure to check out their "The Seldom Seen Kid Live at Abbey Road" album.

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They Say All Music Guide

In a world where even the generally mediocre likes of Snow Patrol can have honest to goodness mainstream pop success, it seems peculiar that Elbow have never broken through beyond a devoted cult following. (Admittedly, the fact that their new labels, Polygram’s alt rock imprint Fiction Records in the U.K. and Geffen in the U.S., are their fourth and fifth, respectively, after stints on Island, EMI, and V2, may have a lot to do with their lack of mainstream attention.) Exploring the fruitful middle ground between early Radiohead’s mopey art rock and Coldplay’s radio-friendly dumbing down of the same, Elbow makes records built on a balance of things not often found together anymore: strange musical textures alongside immediately accessible pop song choruses, or unexpected left turns in song structure paired with frontman Guy Garvey’s warm, piercing vocals. It’s no surprise that Elbow are regularly compared to old-school prog rockers like Pink Floyd and Electric Light Orchestra: they’re proof that records can be cool and commercial at the same time, an idea that’s not particularly hip in this day and age. Yet a song like “Grounds for Divorce,” which puts a sharp, wryly funny Garvey lyric against a clanging, Tom Waits-like arrangement and throws on one of the album’s catchiest tunes for good measure, or “Some Riot,” which filters a yearning, lovely melody for guitar and piano through so many layers of effects and processing that it can be hard to tell what the original instruments sounded like, isn’t afraid to display its accessibility even on its most experimental numbers. At the album’s best, including the spacious, atmospheric balladry of the opening “Starlings” (imagine if Sigur Rós could write a pop song as emotionally direct as Keane’s “Everybody’s Changing”) and the potential radio breakthroughs of the soaring, semi-orchestral epic “One Day Like This” (complete with choral climax!) and the wistful “Weather to Fly,” The Seldom Seen Kid is Elbow’s most self-assured and enjoyable album so far. [The U.K. version added "We're Away" as a bonus track.] – Stewart Mason

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