Oranges & Lemons

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Oranges & Lemons album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 60:55

eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

03.28.11
Bright, sweet, tart and fabulously groovy
2003 | Label: CAROLINE ASTRALWERKS - CAT

A rare logical occurrence for a band too clever to regularly achieve them, XTC’s 10th and most accessible album brought it closest to the American mainstream. As suggested by its title and artwork, Oranges & Lemons is bright, sweet, tart and fabulously groovy; the psychedelia of the band’s Todd Rundgren-helmed Skylarking and spoofing but sharp Dukes of Stratosphear output keeps coming, but here it’s shaped into fizzy and recognizably late-’80s pop.

The sound is particularly trebly; Rickenbacker guitars, snappy snares, tambourines, woodblocks, handclaps, sitar-like effects, and horns both synthetic and actual abound. Mr. Mister/King Crimson drummer Pat Mastelotto brings syncopated swing that suggests the era’s new jack R&B, and the band maintains the fun of its Dukes records. Even if bassist Colin Moulding sings, “You’ve got to help me get through these cynical days,” the overall feeling here — like the sound mix itself — is light and unclouded. XTC once sang of burning with optimism’s flame; here they’re consistently doing it.

The vibrant opening salvo of “Garden of Earthly Delights,” “The Mayor of Simpleton” and “King for a Day” is the closest XTC ever got to pop-rock commercialism, but they do it on their own crafty terms. Promoted with a suitably… read more »

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One of the most underrated...

Dhfalcon23

pop/rock bands and albums. 'Mayor of Simpleton' (kind of an updated 'What a Wonderful World') is a great pop song. XTC has this ability to make it sound like they could fall out of bed and write, perform and produce great tunes. Great sense of humor throughout ('Garden of Earthly Delights' - Don't hurt no one...unless they ask you to!) as well as their biting social content ('Here Comes Pres Kill Again') These guys are great!

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Icon: XTC

By Barry Walters, eMusic Contributor

Classified as post-punk, power pop, New Wave, art-rock, neo-psychedelia, alternative rock, chamber pop and various combinations thereof, XTC forged a path that inspired many, yet remains utterly unique. In its 22 years of making albums, this ever-changing band from Swindon, England, achieved something musically akin to the Beatles — substantial tunes, kinetic musicianship, social commentary and evolving studio craft — with a fraction of their popularity. Like the Fab Four, this quartet transitioned from being… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Skylarking was an ambitious yet concise record, one that recalled such graceful concept albums as Pet Sounds and Sgt. Pepper, so it wasn’t entirely a surprise that XTC embraced psychedelia on its double-album follow-up, Oranges & Lemons, especially if their celebrated Dukes of Stratosphear side project was taken into consideration as well. Oranges & Lemons lacks the singular focus of Skylarking, but at its best, it’s just as impressive as its predecessor. Instead of revelling in the form of psychedelic pop, as they did with the Dukes, XTC bring the genre’s sensibility to the mature pop of Skylarking, spiking it with a wry, occasionally absurd sense of humor missing from its predecessor. The result is a record exploding with details, not the least of which are backward guitars, sound effects, and head-spinningly eclectic arrangements. It’s sonically rich and filled with immaculately crafted songs, but Oranges & Lemons falls just short of being a tour de force, since each song feels like an island — they work well as individual tracks, but they don’t form a cohesive statement. However, that’s a minor complaint, because Colin Moulding and Andy Partridge in particular are in peak form, contributing some of their very finest songs in “Garden of Earthly Delights,” “The Loving,” “One of the Millions,” “Merely a Man,” “Pink Thing,” and the elegiac “Chalkhills and Children.” Such songs make the relative weaknesses of the album well worth enduring. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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