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Youth Novels
 
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Youth Novels

Lykke LiMP3 Download
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (54 customer reviews)
Price: £5.99
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  Song Title Time Price    
Play   1. Melodies & Desires 3:52 £0.69
Play   2. Dance, Dance, Dance 3:41 £0.69
Play   3. I'm Good, I'm Gone 3:09 £0.69
Play   4. Let It Fall 2:42 £0.69
Play   5. My Love 4:36 £0.69
Play   6. Tonight 4:13 £0.69
Play   7. Little Bit 4:33 £0.69
Play   8. Hanging High 4:07 £0.69
Play   9. This Trumpet In My Head 1:42 £0.69
Play 10. Complaint Department 4:32 £0.69
Play 11. Breaking It Up 3:40 £0.69
Play 12. Everybody But Me 3:18 £0.69
Play 13. Time Flies 3:21 £0.69
Play 14. Window Blues 3:59 £0.69
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By David J. Kelly VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
let's get this off my hairy, neanderthal, roots rock loving, Zeppelin obsessed chest, this should not be my cup of tea. This is slightly out there, a bit leftfield and a bit poppy. However, after a few listens it appears that I get this. Think of Bjork, Royskopp and even The Eurythmics and you are starting to get a feel for what to expect from this album. It has melodies and subtle hooks with the breathy, feminime voice of Lykke Li herself. In all it is very enjoyable and a guilty pleasure I think I may revisit. The best songs are the excellent opener, "Melodies & Desires", the single "A Little Bit" and theback to back "Complaint Department" and "Breaking It Up" but there isn't really a weak track.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By sf20 VINE™ VOICE
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Lykke Li falls into the same category as many Scandinavian artists - quirky, kooky but also very talented. Youth Novels is an original and entertaining album with elements of Bjork and electro/indie influences. She has a lovely voice and the songs are all easy listening and very relaxing. As a result I found this was an easy album to just pass over at first, but on second and third listening I came to appreciate its off the wall production and indivdual subtleties and see it for the enjoyable debut that it is.

I would say that Youth Novels is a bit of an acquired taste so do make sure you give it a good thorough listening before switching off or relegating it to "background music".
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Love is a symphony 19 Aug 2008
By E. A Solinas HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD
For the record, Lykke Li has one of the most punnish stage names in all of the pop world.

Fortunately the obvious jokes are no reflection on the talents of this fledgling Swedish singer (real name: Li Lykke Timotej Zachrisson), her high soft voice, and her unique brand of pop music. And her full-length debut "Youth Novels" is an exquisite little confection -- wistful, robustly elfin songs set to sweetly wintry electro-folkpop.

It opens with a gentle stream of piano and plaintive strings, as Lykke Li quietly speaks. "Follow these instructions/Do exactly as I do... Love is the harmony/Desire is the key/Love is a symphony/Now play it with me..."

Things pick up with the more "Dance Dance Dance," an adorable little song about expressing your feelings via dancing, and the hard-edged/twinkly piano of "I'm Good I'm Gone" ("Well, say you're not 'cause when I'm gone/You'll be callin' but I won't be at the phone!"). But things start relaxing with the jazzier pop melody of "Let It Fall."

From there, Lykke Li explores some more mellow electro-folkpop, with haunting folk songs tinged with synth, sweetly romantic (and slightly sexy) guitar pop, exquisitely wistful ballads, dark electropop, and a weird experimental number where she spends a long time muttering "can't get that trumpet outta my head!" The album ends on a rather dark note with the stomping ballad "Window Blues ("Don't go all soft on me/don't come across for me/don't lose your selfish ways over me...."

If I had to compare Lykke Li to somebody, I'd say she sounds like Stina Nordenstam, or a more childlike, less innocent El Perro Del Mar. But those are just stylistic similarities, because her pretty pop has a very distinct sound even in her first album. And "Youth Novels" has a feeling of bittersweet, pretty intimacy -- it's sitting with a friend whose heart has just started to heal, and watching the snowflakes flutter down outside the window.

And her music is also very pretty -- we've got a bit of jazz, a bit of indie pop, and a veil of pale, soft electronica laid over it all like a blanket. She even does some experimentation in such songs as "Dance Dance Dance," which is the most mellow, downtempo dance song I've ever heard -- and most of it is just drums and a tapped bell.

The rest of the time, you can hear a delicate web of solid instrumentation -- half-smothered saxophone, a folky acoustic guitar, a xylophone, gentle tinkly piano melodies, kettle drums, and stretches of gentle plaintive strings. Oh yes, and some moments of buzzy dark synthpop, like in the gloriously dark "Complaint Department," and a swirling Spanish guitar that winds through one song.

And then there's the vocals. This girl has a voice of spun glass and sunlit icicles, and regardless of what she sings she sounds incredibly sweet and fragile. Despite some awkward moments ("For you I keep my legs apart" -- what?), her lyrics are also quite sweet -- the absence of love is painful, while its presence brings you shyness, joy and defensiveness. Just look at the one about communicating love through dance.

If you just skimmed through "Youth Novel," you'd think that Lykke Li's debut album was just a stretch of electropop with some folk overtones. But it's something far prettier and more alluring.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Good Album, Not Good Packaging
This album is amazing, of course.

But the CD casing looked like it had been put together by a 8-year-old. Read more
Published 9 months ago by lotty
Internal damage to CD jewel case.
The external packaging was OK, but when I opened the CD, the spindle that holds the CD in the jewel case was damaged (5 of the plastic tabs were broken). Read more
Published 12 months ago by Steve L
Youth Novels should be in everyone's collection
I heard this on BBC's coverage of Glastonbury last year when she did a session for Jo Whiley. Absolutely stunning album, she has a great voice and soulful melodies combining with... Read more
Published on 11 May 2009 by Paul Mynard
Stunning atmospheric debut
For a country which produces so many artists it takes something special from a debut artist to make me listen more than a couple of times, this did it. Read more
Published on 30 Sep 2008 by Mr. L. Mullin
Great, Breezy Pop
I'd never heard of Lykke Li before, but I'm sure we'll all be hearing a lot more of her after word gets around about her debut album. Read more
Published on 30 July 2008 by Particular Press
Sweet & Gentle
I found Lykke Li's voice angelic & sweet. Her style reminds me of the Cardigans & alittle bit Bjork. The songs are intertwined with alot of instruments & somewhat different. Read more
Published on 18 July 2008 by Q
Music for dead people
I can't think of a single reason why anyone would want to listen to this tedious stuff, except maybe Swedish indie-pop completists. Well, there might be one, you never know. Read more
Published on 18 July 2008 by P. Bryant
Breathtaking AND slightly irritating
As the old joke never went, you don't have to be Scandinavian to musically conquer the UK, but it helps. Hence Swedish 22-year-old Lykke Li and her debut album Youth Novels. Read more
Published on 13 July 2008 by IWFIcon
More quality Scandinavian pop
This is broadly in the steam of previous Scandinavian indie-pop outfits The Cardigans and The Concretes, but it is a lot more lo-fi and edged more towards the indie than pop side... Read more
Published on 26 Jun 2008 by Ian Shine
Ethereal
This is a bit of a niche album, but pretty good if you're into that sort of thing. Reminiscent of Sigur Ros or the more electronic burblings that Radiohead sometimes put out, it... Read more
Published on 24 Jun 2008 by Cuban Heel
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