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New Magnetic Wonder

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (591 ratings)
New Magnetic Wonder album cover
01
Can You Feel It?
4:11 $0.99
02
Skyway
2:40 $0.99
03
Mellotron 1
0:33 $0.99
04
Energy
3:31 $0.99
05
Same Old Drag
3:22 $0.99
06
Joanie Don't U Worry
0:46 $0.99
07
Sunndal Song
3:31 $0.99
08
Droplet
0:13 $0.99
09
Play Tough
3:27 $0.99
10
Sun Is Out
2:30 $0.99
11
Non-Pythagorean Composition 1
0:31 $0.99
12
Hello Lola
0:15 $0.99
13
7 Stars
3:47 $0.99
14
Mellotron 2
0:42 $0.99
15
Sunday Sounds
2:59 $0.99
16
Open Eyes
5:13 $0.99
17
Crimson
0:18 $0.99
18
Pre-Crimson
1:25 $0.99
19
Vocoder Ba Ba
0:14 $0.99
20
Radiation
3:14 $0.99
21
Beautiful Machine Parts 1-2
2:36 $0.99
22
Beautiful Machine Parts 3-4
4:58 $0.99
23
My Pretend
0:43 $0.99
24
Non-Pythagorean Composition 3
0:50 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 24   Total Length: 52:29

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Write a Review 40 Member Reviews

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user avatar

Way more joy

hightouchmegastore

I've reaped way more joy out of this than I thought I would--happy, happy music, with a ton of verve and poppy fun. LOVE.

user avatar

Great Record!

CosmicBob

I'm surprised by the many luke warm reviews. If you like the band, this is a fine record.

user avatar

so so

FatOnnie

My kids (10 and 12) love Track 1 and Energy is undeniably catchy if a bit too much so (are you sure this isn't a John Lennon cover?) I listen to Beautiful Machines and that's about it.

user avatar

Bubblegum

BuckeyeSmitty

There are some brilliant pop songs on here, and I sometimes forget how good they are. It's an album you will replay a bunch of times until you burn out on it, and then dust it off 6 months later having forgot how much you loved it.

user avatar

Gets old fast.

holidaysurprise123

I liked this CD for the first couple listens.I can no longer listen to it anymore...it's so cloyingly saccharine. In terms of individual songs, Energy, Same Old Drag and Play Tough are decent but as a whole the album just doesn't deliver.

user avatar

when you like something

jdubya

you don't have to explain why you like something when it is just good. This is just undeniably good.

user avatar

great geek rock

DPick

I have to be honest and say that the album that I love is not the whole download. I picked only the "song" tracks, but that makes for a great album. The music is energetic (no pun intended), melodic and it rocks too. See them live if you get the chance.

user avatar

Mindless, catchy fun

pixelologist

If you're looking for challenging music look elsewhere. If you want something with energy (track #4...hehe) for say when you're tooling down the highway I'd recommend this set highly. It's fun and mostly upbeat, chock full of hooks to latch onto - most of this stuff you'll be able to sing along to even on the very first listen. I'm used to counting that as a minus (I don't like to always know where a song's going before it's gotten there) but the Apples have gotten under my skin.

user avatar

Great Taste, Less Filling

Digitalisdante

Super fun CD, but it doesn't wear well. After a few weeks, I took this off my player and haven't really looked back. Maybe one of these days I'll dig it out and have some fun all over again. Worth the downloads if you are looking for something catchy. Side note: I originally downloaded this album in the days before full-album downloads, and skipped all the short experimental tracks. Come to find out I can now download these tracks for free. I'm not 100% happy about the new pricing structure here, but at least there are some silver linings like this.

user avatar

creative fun!

fisch

the apples strive for that classic throw-back sound yet at the same time try to create something entirely new. they're very original. their "energy" song is so catchy that Pepsi now uses it in a commercial (8/09).

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

New Magnetic Wonder, the Apples in Stereo’s return after a five-year hiatus, is one of their best records in a career made up of consistently fine recordings. Anyone expecting a return to the experimental, lo-fi wizardry of their early albums may feel let down by New Magnetic Wonder, but on the other hand, anyone fearing a return to the bland stripped-down and noisy sound of Velocity of Sound need not worry. What they have delivered instead is a crisply recorded set of bouncing rockers, sweetly strummed ballads, and vaguely trippy mid-tempo tracks that are full of hooks, melodies, and goofy fun. Over a base of solidly rocking bass, guitar, and drums (as well as Robert Schneider’s reliably chirpy vocals), the band and their cohorts (the credits read like an E6 who’s who, including Jeff Mangum of Neutral Milk Hotel, Bill Doss and W. Cullen Hart of the Olivia Tremor Control, and John Fernandes, who has played clarinet with just about all the E6 bands) create a rich soundscape of Mellotron, backing vocals, percussion, and vintage keyboards that envelops the record in a warm and lush haze at times and fills it with sunshine at others. Even more than previous Apples releases, it’s a record that won’t win any points for being profound or meaningful. Tracks like “Can You Feel It?” or “Energy” are breezy to the point of invisible, but if they don’t get you singing along like a fool right away, you’ve probably come to the wrong party and should go find a Bright Eyes record instead. The more sedate tunes that dominate the second half of the record, like the yearning and psychedelic “Open Eyes” or the melancholy “Radiation,” give the album some balance (and in the Mellotron-soaked epic “Beautiful Machine, Pts. 3-4,” one of the record’s finest moments), but it’s the charming fluff like “Same Old Drag” and “Play Tough” that wins the day in the end. The Apples’ successful return to the indie scene should be hailed with a hearty embrace (and a tear for the departure of drummer Hilarie Sidney, whose two contributions to the record, “Sundial Song” and “Sunday Sounds,” are quite nice) for anyone who likes their pop silly but intelligently played and arranged. Welcome back, Apples! – Tim Sendra

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