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Oui

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (150 ratings)
Oui album cover
01
Afternoon Speaker
4:18 $0.99
02
All The Photos
3:19 $0.99
03
You Beautiful Bastard
5:54 $0.99
04
The Colony Room
4:10 $0.99
05
The Leaf
4:24 $0.99
06
Everyday
3:01 $0.99
07
Two Dolphins
3:46 $0.99
08
Midtown
2:56 $0.99
09
Seemingly
4:46 $0.99
10
I Missed The Glance
4:01 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 40:35

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Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

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The Sea and Cake at Their Best

pistolpete

Mellow, jazzy indie pop with intoxicating melodies and insinuating rhythms. Sam Prekop's subtle hushed vocals are the perfect counterpoint to the band's breezy musical attack. "Afternoon Speaker" is my favorite, while "All the Photos," "Two Dolphins," and "Midtown" are nearly as good. Well worth downloading.

user avatar

Catchy Genius

amielioration

For my part, this tops all Sea and Cake albums before it because it is so compact and direct. It is a satisfying listen end to end, an underrated classic for the Chicago scene and the Thrill Jockey catalog.

user avatar

Jazzy jam-tastic

brepuck

This was my introduction to the Sea and Cake -- less than a year ago. (How I managed to miss them until now, I'll never know.) I was immediately smitten, but realize this isn't their best album. But it's still freaking good.

user avatar

Worth The 10 Song Download

DaveWeck

Perfect mix of mellow, jazzy instrumentation and warm, airy vocals. This album flows quite well. Perfect for summer. Standout tracks: Midtown, You Beautiful Bastard, Afternoon Speaker.

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They Say All Music Guide

In the three-plus years following the release of 1997′s The Fawn, the Sea and Cake’s ever-busy membership dabbled in solo albums, touring with side projects, and various other responsibilities that come with the territory in the Chicago indie rock scene. But as effortlessly as an April breeze, the quartet reconvened to turn in Oui, quite possibly the finest of the group’s five albums to date. Oui brightens up the electroacoustic hybrids first heard on The Fawn with guidance from frontman Sam Prekop’s Brazilian-influenced 1999 solo debut and drummer John McEntire’s production work on two Stereolab albums. While the looping synths often bogged down the mediocre material on The Fawn, the electronics serve as much better complements here. Prekop turns in some of his catchiest melodies to date, while the band follows suit on the sparkling, funky pop of “All the Photos” and the wobbly, mallet-laden “The Leaf,” which makes good on the soothing ballad style introduced on “Window Lights,” TSAC’s contribution to the 1999 McEntire-scored Reach the Rock soundtrack. A sophisticated pop pleasure from start to finish, Oui is the aural equivalent of a perpetual Indian summer. – Jonathan Cohen

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