Summer Palace

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (30 ratings)
Summer Palace album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 58:47

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Hook Heavy

depthfunction

Most power pop bands in recent years get compared to The New Pornographers, but I think Sunny Day Sets Fire is the one band that comes closest. SDSF's songs aren't quite as immediately catchy as NPs', but SDSF seems to be just as determined to cram as many hooks into their songs as possible. With SDSF, if you don't like a song, just wait 45 seconds until it morphs into another song and enjoy. Again, not quite as catchy as the NPs, but songs like "Adrenaline," "Mandarins," "Stranger," and "Brainless" are must-downloads for any power pop fan.

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Half a gem

CANTBELIEVEIMPAYINGFORTHISCRAP

The first 10 or 11 songs are wonderful, then the record shifts gears into less joyous and more irritating territory. SDSF are at their best when on a romantic sugar high.

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Can't stop listening

PurloinedInPetrograd

My first experience with this band was hearing the quirky audio crack that is "Brainless." If you don't have that song, download it now! It's their most addictive, but the rest of the album is excellent as well. My favorite tracks after my 5th listen today include "Teenagers Talking," "Smallest Heart on Earth" and "Mandarins." Really, though, this is one of those rare albums where I find myself enjoying every song.

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They Say All Music Guide

Hampered a bit by a fairly terrible band name (supposedly chosen using one of those random word generators one finds on the Internet) that makes them sound like yet another cookie-cutter mall punk emo band, London-based internationalists Sunny Day Sets Fire are actually an immediately likable indie pop band with subtle psychedelic influences. Following up on a pair of scene-setting EPs, debut full-length Summer Palace makes a strong case for the band right out of the gate with the exhilarating widescreen pop of “Wilderness,” a meaty and melodic piece of summertime ear candy that hits all the pure pop pleasure centers while, remarkably, not sounding enough like any particular band to make its influences obvious. Little of the rest of Summer Palace hits those exalted heights, though the swooning, expansive “Mandarins” comes very close, but it’s a consistently solid record filled with perky vocal hooks, luxurious male/female harmonies, and inventive, tuneful arrangements. Utterly charming without being precious and cutesy, Summer Palace is an unexpected gem recommended to fans of the Apples in Stereo, XTC, or any of the Dave Fridmann-produced bands. – Stewart Mason

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