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The People's Key [VINYL]

Bright Eyes Vinyl
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
Price: £11.16
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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Biography

Since 2006 the once revolving cast of Bright Eyes players has settled around permanent members Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis and Nathaniel Walcott, with additional musicians joining them in the studio and on tour. Fully realized and bursting with charisma, The People’s Key is an assured and accomplished album, artfully arranged and filled with the engaging and mesmeric songwriting for which ... Read more in Amazon's Bright Eyes Store

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Frequently Bought Together

The People's Key [VINYL] + Cassadaga + Digital Ash In A Digital Urn
Price For All Three: £24.76

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Product details

  • Vinyl (25 April 2011)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Saddle Creek
  • ASIN: B004GHYCBQ
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 122,363 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Disc: 1
1. Firewall
2. Shell Games
3. Jejune Stars
4. Approximate Sunlight
5. Haile Selassie
6. A Machine Spiritual (In the People's Key) - Bright Eyes
7. Triple Spiral - Bright Eyes
8. Beginner's Mind - Bright Eyes
9. Ladder Song - Bright Eyes
10. One for You, One for Me - Bright Eyes
Disc: 2
1. A Machine Spiritual (In The People's Key)
2. Triple Spiral
3. Beginner's Mind
4. Ladder Song
5. One For You One For Me

Product Description

BBC Review

Like many before him who achieved brilliance in popular songwriting, Conor Oberst changed, in 2007, to become a different artist. The great humanist of a generation didn’t write many songs that were about concrete human experiences anymore, but contemplated new-age spirituality and mysticism instead. The emotional intensity had disappeared, and the catatonic angst at the core of his being – which screamed out of key and out of tune on his earlier songs – was getting lost in his oblique new approach to songwriting. That phase started with Cassadaga, and has run through both albums with the Mystic Valley Band and Monsters of Folk. Like Dylan’s mid-60s period of surrealism, it was a big stylistic change that left a few people cold.

In 2011, Oberst is still releasing albums framed – like Cassadaga – by a lunatic’s sermon that doesn’t seem like it’s being used for the purposes of irony. The worry is that there is nothing in the songs to suggest that Oberst – like the great Scientologist, Beck – doesn’t embrace this stuff too. On the finer cuts, such as the title-track, a weird, mescaline-soaked narrative is woven through hallucinatory images of Americana. On the piano ballad Ladder Song, he laments, "I know when this world’s done / This world is an hallucination," which captures the new paradigm. But aside from a few moments of clarity – with references to pilgrims, the Queen of Sheba, and a host of grand allegorical images – the songs don’t really communicate much, other than some unspecified transition to a different place: physical, artistic or mental.

The vagueness of the lyrics doesn’t have to be a problem, of course, as Dylan showed on Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde on Blonde. But those records had rocking tunes. Back in 2003, Oberst could have sung Happy Birthday and made you weep. On 2002’s Lifted, the band sounded like the world was about to end and they were the only musicians worth listening to. But with his vocals still restrained and the band’s music only changing from gentle Americana to a slightly harder electric sound, The People’s Key doesn’t have as much to convince the listener to join Oberst on his journey.

--Lewis G. Parker

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Product Description

LP =180Gr=, Comes With Download Card

Customer Reviews

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4.8 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Or Pretentious? 3 April 2011
By lonniej
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
The BBC review is a bit of a put-down but equally as nerdish as those who consider Oberst some kind of philosophical genius. Unlike some previous albums, this can be taken on different levels. It has good tunes, interesting (if pretentious, as usual) lyrics and a slick production. The standard pop song lover will enjoy the catchy 'Shell Games' and 'Beginner's Mind'. The more 'discerning' listener will like all except the embarassing opening and ending crap. Why can't this be given seperate track status so that I can avoid it? It loses a star rating from me. Pity. The rest was great.
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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful
By Tom TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD
Length: 1:12 Mins
The 8th studio recorded album by singer-songwriter and guitarist Conor Oberst and his band delivers what potentially could be his last album under the Bright Eyes name. Nice that it was actually released on Conor Oberst's birthday.

The album features guest artists Andy LeMaster of Now It's Overhead, Matt Maginn of Cursive, Carla Azar of Autolux, Clark Baechle of The Faint, Shane Aspegren of The Berg Sans Nipple, Laura Burhenn of The Mynabirds, and Denny Brewer of Refried Ice Cream.[11] The lyrics make mention of Haile Selassie, the Lion of Judah and I and I, all symbols of Rastafariansim.

Opening with a spoken word intro on 'Firewall' and orchestral backing, with talk of history, evolution, space, science and spirits. The guy is Denny Brewer, I don't know any more about him, but he features throughout the album. After 2 mins a old wild west style guitar loop kicks in and conor's familiar vocals, more gentle than on previous albums, builds nicely with drums and ends up exploding into life. Beautiful opener of a song, mixing old and new sides of Bright Eyes. The loop reminds me of a song by 'Martin Grech' but that's the only similarity, worth a listen though as he is amazing too. Amazon don't have the song in question, but this one is in similar vain The Heritage
'Shell Games' is an upbeat song with guitar, synths and violin in tow. It's great to hear the positivity amongst conor's troubled musings.
'Jejune Stars' incredible song, again pretty upbeat, awesome song with furious electronic drum beats and bass sporadicaly throughout, ends with the chap who spoke at the start of first track 'Firewall'. 'Approximate Sunlight'takes us back to 2002 album LIFTED ( OR THE STORY IS ) with it's dark thought provoking lyrics and sound, very very good and powerful in feeling. 'Haile Selassie' is a mid tempo track with pretty good feeling within, nice chorus, clever lyrics and musically strong. 'A Machine Spiritual (In the People's Key)' is another mid-up tempo track, with positive lyrics, thoughtful and clever, ends with the same chap talking again which flows into the next song. At this stage this album is turning our to be one of Bright Eyes best and if it is the last one, he is going out on a high, leaving a great legacy behind. 'Triple Spiral' would have also fit nicely on 2005 album Digital Ash in a Digital Urn, synth and guitar surround upbeat lyrics in a very bouncy song indeed. 'Beginners Mind' is another great upbeat track that starts slow and acoustic and builds into a full blown band track with a great chorus that will have singing 'Starting Over, You Keep, Starting Over, You Keep, Starting Over' for weeks and ends of echoey robotic vocals and back down to acoustic again. 'Ladder Song' is a moving piano and vocal based song with thoughtful moving lyrics, one of my highlights of the album and well placed just before the last track. 'One For You, One For Me' leaves us with a floaty, beautiful song sounding song that the Flaming lips would have been proud, first band that came to mind, Would be a favourite of Bright Eyes fans that love Digital Ash in a Digital Urn, which is one of my favourite albums, this track finishes with the old guy (Denny Brewer).

This album will stand the test of time, an amazing piece of work, art, musical genius which feels almost like a look back over all conor's work and forward to what could be. I for one am hoping that this is not the last Bright Eyes album, but if he chooses to lay this hat down, he has left a lasting legacy that we all can cherish.
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7 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Business as usual... 17 Feb 2011
Format:Audio CD
Many folk are saying that this is the best CD that Conor has ever released... To be honest this put me off a little. You know how hype goes. Your high expectations usually leave you disappointed.

The People's Key is a great album but this is nothing unusual, if you look back over his catalogue. Conor Oberst seems to just keep churning out fantastic music without too much effort. I own 26 of his releases to date but I think there are 29 in total. I have located the missing three online and will order them soon but just take a second to take that in... 29 releases, in his modest years that is just plain remarkable.

So is this release his best to date?
Well with questions like this, it comes down to opinion and as a better man than I once said "Opinions are like arseholes, everybody has one!"
This is a great album, that's about as far as I will venture. As far as comparing it to any of the others, I couldn't pick a favourite really... In the same way that you couldn't pick a favourite child. I love them all!

As with most Bright Eyes releases, there is the strange introductions to get past. These are used to ward off any casual listeners. Most of these add a lot to the rest of the CD but I did find the introduction to this album a little less than great. It's just some guy rambling on about religion and the begining of the world. I am not religious and I did find this intro a little silly but taken with a pinch of salt, it won't cause any problems.

All in all a great release, a worthy addition to his collection and yet another example of the genius that is Conor Oberst!
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