Well to be honest you can't lose yourself in all parts of the CD, and more's the pity. This CD is on the brink of masterpiece that You Forgot It In People achieved, but there are some tracks that ruin the beautiful and ethereal atmosphere the first half establishes and only resumes near the end. My ratings:
1. I Slept With Bonhomme At The CBC: 9/10, mmm what a way to start it, beautiful, mesmorizing, enchanting, etc. etc.
2. Guilty Cubicles: 9/10, it continues, this track blends flawlessly with the previous and continues the beauty.
3. Love And Mathematics: 11/10! Yes it goes off my own scale, my favorite jam song ever, it's like a drum fiesta with guitars swooping and diving around the core drum beats! Best track on the album by far!
4. Passport Radio: 8.5/10, dreamy vocals, dreamy guitars, it's all-around... what's the word... dreamy!
5. Alive In 85: 9/10, very catchy, makes me want to bounce, quite a nice poppy feel to it you can't help but like.
6. Prison Province: 5/10, yuck! I mean... why? They were on a role, they were kicking ass, but this song is the first of the "bad half" of the CD.
7. Blues For Uncle Gibb: 6.5/10, very dark, and not very pleasant. I somewhat enjoy the haunting hermonica, but the rest? No.
8. Stomach Song: 6/10, this song sounds like it emerged from the stomach, so in a way it's fitting. It's grating and annoying.
9. Massbroker: 7.5/10, cheer up, things are getting a little better! While the violin squeeks like a dying animal at the beginning, it gets better toward the end.
10. Feel Good Lost: 7/10, I love the name, but as title tracks go this is just too weird and too short.
11. Last Place: 9.5/10, yes, back in action! This 8-minute-long track is amazing, your ultimate roadtrip song, it makes me think of rolling plains of grass.
12. Cranley's Gonna Make It: 9.5/10, triumphant finish, one of the catchiest songs on the album, and I love how it ends so breathlessly, just like you feel after this album's rollercoaster of sounds concludes.
If it weren't for the dark and dreary middle of this CD (which some could argue is necessary, as it completes the voyage this CD takes you on), I would rate the album a 5. As it is, I treasure the truly great songs off this album as some of the best instrumental rock songs ever made, and I am so happy Broken Social Scene is only continuing to get better with time.