The Meadowlands

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (291 ratings)
The Meadowlands album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 56:08

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An album full of ear worms

BullDuggins

I picked this up a few years after it came out, and have been listening to it on an off ever since--it's got a lot of songs on it that make me want to play them again and again. I've probably put "Hopeless" on repeat 20 times and still don't get tired of it. This album is really worth your time and effort. Too bad that one of the tracks is not available.

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mmmm hmmmmm

Iamatree

this one's going to the grave with me.....simply can't be overplayed....

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Download NOW

JPReview

This is one of my all-time faves and I can't even believe it's on here. Great landscape of rock..Boys, You Won't Remember is one of the best songs of all time.

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Yes!

SnarkyMark

Wow. This one blindsided me. From 2003. All over the map stylistically, but some really awesome 4-piece rock and roll.

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great breakup album

poxod

enough said

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visit the website

redaktor

These guys rock, and they REALLY deserve a break. For a good laugh/cry: http://www.wrens.com/bio

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A Must Have

NoChumpStumpy

If you've never heard of/listened to the Wrens, download & enjoy. best track - Hopeless

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Great

gkg

Excellent! On top of the other standouts that the others have listed I would recommend Happy. Awesome indie pop.

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tastylicious

okboomshanka

yeah ... some really lush tracks on here - a number of almost contradictory flavours mixed into a mostest delectable soup . yummy

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They Say All Music Guide

The Wrens’ third album, The Meadowlands, is a sprawling, shifting affair, perhaps reflecting the fact that it took four years to create. It’s easy to take the sweet, slightly alt-country “13 Months in 6 Minutes” at face value — the song’s epic feel suggests the passing of a considerable chunk of time, and at the Wrens’ pace, it’s possible that it did take over a year to craft. Rather fittingly, the album itself is also long, and the way that its songs jump and shift in tone and mood suggests a series of journal entries strung together, connected loosely by an overall brokenhearted feeling. A pair of bitterly pretty songs open The Meadowlands after the interlude “The House That Guilt Built” sets the tone with its early summer evening atmosphere: on “Happy,” the Wrens sing “Are you happy?/You got what you want/I’m over it now,” revealing their true feelings before shimmering guitars carry the song off on another tangent; “She Sends Kisses” goes from whispery, late-night anguish to high drama. Like Secaucus, most of the album trades in a classic indie rock sound — just this side of accessible, but not overly experimental either. “This Boy Is Exhausted” and the new wavey “Faster Gun” are deceptively simple, bright, and shiny but with underlying complexities that provide a sharp contrast to the album’s gentler moments, such as the shambling beauty of “Thirteen Grand” and the sweetly twangy “Ex-Girl Collection.” The Meadowlands saves some of its most rock moments for the end of the album: “Per Second Second,” an angular, Pixies-esque bit of punk, and the anthemic “Everyone Chooses Sides” send the album out in a blaze of glory that initially seems a little at odds with the melancholy tone of the rest of the album but, after a few listens, reveals itself as strangely appropriate. It’s possible that The Meadowlands might be a “better” album if it were more focused and logical, but there’s something to be said for its immersive, stream-of-consciousness approach. It’s also tempting to say that hopefully it won’t take the Wrens as long to make their next album as it did to make The Meadowlands, but when the results are this good, the time it took to make the album is more than justified. – Heather Phares

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