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The Glow Pt. 2 (Reissue)

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (230 ratings)
The Glow Pt. 2 (Reissue) album cover
Disc 1 of 2
01
I Want Wind To Blow
5:32 $0.99
02
the Glow pt. 2
4:58 $0.99
03
the Moon
5:16 $0.99
04
Headless Horseman
3:08 $0.99
05
My Roots Are Strong and Deep
1:53 $0.99
06
instrumental
1:38 $0.99
07
the Mansion
3:52 $0.99
08
(something)
1:38 $0.99
09
(something) continued
2:42 $0.99
10
I'll Not Contain You
2:50 $0.99
11
the Gleam pt. 2
1:57 $0.99
12
Map
5:00 $0.99
13
You'll Be In The Air
2:41 $0.99
14
I Want To Be Cold
1:41 $0.99
15
I Am Bored
1:36 $0.99
16
I Felt My Size
2:24 $0.99
17
instrumental
1:52 $0.99
18
I Felt Your Shape
1:54 $0.99
19
Samurai Sword
4:07 $0.99
20
My Warm Blood
9:28 $0.99
Disc 2 of 2
01
Where Lies My Tarp?
3:48 $0.99
02
I Felt My Size (Acoustic)
1:52 $0.99
03
I Hope You Wish You'd Die
2:18 $0.99
04
I'm Like You, Tree
1:14 $0.99
05
the Glow pt. 2 (sequel)
1:47 $0.99
06
We're Here To Listen
3:27 $0.99
07
Sleepy Hollow
1:19 $0.99
08
Lanterns (version)
2:06 $0.99
09
Map / Moon (version)
1:31 $0.99
10
the Glow pt. 2 (version)
6:12 $0.99
11
I Want Wind To Blow (version)
4:18 $0.99
12
instrumental (version)
0:25 $0.99
13
the Moon (version)
3:46 $0.99
14
Samurai Sword (version)
1:25 $0.99
15
the Gleam pt. 2 (version)
2:36 $0.99
16
My Roots... (version)
0:23 $0.99
17
I Felt My Size (version)
1:26 $0.99
18
My Warm Blood (humming)
0:22 $0.99
19
You'll Be In The Air (version)
0:59 $0.99
20
the Mooooon (version)
1:54 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 40   Total Length: 109:15

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

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Yancey Strickler

eMusic Contributor

04.07.08
Indie rock's other lo-fi masterpiece.
Label: K Records / SC Distribution

If The Glow Pt. 2 were six or seven tracks shorter, it might rank with Neutral Milk Hotel's In the Aeroplane Over the Sea as one of the best indie-rock albums ever made. As it is, Phil Elvrum's masterpiece gets a bit lost across its twenty tracks — but only just a bit. Despite its lack of focus (the one criticism you can pin on Elvrum), The Glow Pt. 2 is magnificent, a heartbreaking album that sprawls and burrows, wet with tears and rain.

If you are new to Phil Elvrum, a quick word on his aesthetic: lots of acoustic guitar layers that often sound like they are chasing their own shadows; he self-harmonizes a lot, but very loosely: syllables echo, words start and then start again as he finds his way to them; and his lyrics almost solely deal with longing and desire, pronounced gorgeously, and in a bucolic framework. Nature itself is often a character in his songs: Thoreau and Elvrum would have a lot to talk about.

So, the best songs, then: "I'll Not Contain You" (light and airy), "Map" (beautiful and foreboding), "I Want Wind to Blow" (precious), "I Felt My Size" (stunning and obtuse) and "I Felt… read more »

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modern classic

circusflea

Ranks up there with Neutral Milk Hotels "in and Aeroplane"...

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Attentive listening pays

Gigasaurus

Starting off with a bang, the first 3 tracks transport you into another world. It begins to thin out after that and gets pretty thin towards the middle, and finally brings itself back together by the end of the 20 tracks on this CD reissue. The second CD has 20 more goodies, in which there are several keepers. I would have to agree that I would have given this 5 stars if it had fewer tracks and the good tracks were a little longer. This is not really a party CD, it is kind of private music. Best listened to without distractions.

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vigilence

m.g

i really like the album in its original state; this reissue does that. the bonus cd, i find to be of a primarily extraneous nature. theres a handful of good tracks*, but watch out. qualification: play all of the microphones' albums sequentially and it creates an amazing macro-composition. this is rare. most artists may not jump styles, but theres a lack of a coherent trajectory or path. the glow pt2 is a keystone in bringing it all together. these additional materials seem extraneous to the album itself, its already a pleasingly long album. *some of the tracks make pleasing options between versions of songs. these are worth the 17 downloads: 1,2,3;8,9,10,11,(12),13;15,(16),17,(18). the primary reason i ignored some tracks is they were just out takes. also, some tracks seem to be the free segments elvrum uses in his albums, but when heard independently without any other structure, they arent much to hear. i may not love some of the tracks above, but they are worth a listen.

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Pitchfork gets some things right

trs

As did most others, I'm sure, I first got turned onto the Microphones via that eccentric-seeking music mag and at first was left somewhat unimpressed. The Glow Pt. 2, though, is possibly the most adventurous yet resoundingly satisfying of the post-E6 indie resurgence.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

While It Was Hot We Stayed in the Water expanded the Microphones’ lo-fi, psych pop horizons, their 66-minute epic The Glow, Pt. 2 marks an even bigger departure. Named after It Was Hot’s sprawling centerpiece, the album explores and explodes styles and moods over the course of 20 songs that lead into one another breathlessly, as if even an hour simply isn’t enough time for Phil Elvrum and company to pack in all of their ideas. The album revels in its kaleidoscopic sounds, spanning pastoral folky ballads, playful symphonic pop, and gusts of white noise. Flourishes like the steel drums on the title track and the double-tracked vocals and xylophones on “The Map” make The Glow, Pt. 2 something of a rarity: a lo-fi album designed for headphones. The distorted drums, murky organs, and crisp acoustic guitars that punctuate the album have an oversaturated, almost tangible quality that, while dense, never overwhelms Elvrum’s fragile voice or poetic lyrics. The beautiful acoustic ballad “I Felt Your Shape” cautions against holding on too tight to someone, literally or figuratively; “I Am Bored” sets the boredom of a dying relationship to noisy fuzz pop. But it’s The Glow, Pt. 2′s deep, nearly spiritual yearning that makes it the Microphones’ most compelling album to date. Vague, strangely hymnal lyrics like “Through rotting skin I’ll leave my coffin/Through callous work I will grow soft,” from “I’ll Not Contain You,” resonate emotionally, albeit cryptically. At times, The Glow, Pt. 2 resembles My Bloody Valentine’s Isn’t Anything (“I Want to Be Cold”) and His Name Is Alive’s Home Is in Your Head (especially on the instrumentals); like those bands’ best work, the album is dense with musical quick-changes, production tricks, and evocative imagery. Expansive yet accessible, indulgent yet unpretentious, The Glow, Pt. 2 redefines the Microphones’ fascinatingly contradictory music. [K's 2008 edition included a bonus 20-track CD.] – Heather Phares

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