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Odd Blood
 
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Odd Blood

Yeasayer Audio CD
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
Price: £7.93 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio CD (8 Feb 2010)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: EMI Music
  • ASIN: B00303WQLU
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 557 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)
    #53 in  Music > Alternative & Indie > Alternative & Indie Rock
    #6 in  Music > Pop > Electro & Synth

1. Children, The
2. Ambling Alp
3. Madder Red
4. I Remember
5. ONE
6. Love Me Girl
7. Rome
8. Strange Reunions
9. Mondegreen
10. Grizelda

Product Description

BBC Review

In 2007, Yeasayer were guaranteed attention with the double-whammy of African-influenced rhythms and a Williamsburg, Brooklyn address. Still, 2080 was one of the year’s best singles – Gang Gang Dance with pop sensibilities, or the Beta Band with sincerity. At their heaviest (Wintertime), Yeasayer were a seductive, slinkier Led Zeppelin, toning down the machismo, but none of the musicianship.

2009 saw members of the band guest on the second album by Bat for Lashes, a fellow traveller in the world of shamanic whimsy, and ended with a mind-melting video to Ambling Amp (a strong return). Here’s the good news: the single isn’t even the third or fourth best track, and it’s Madder Red and O.N.E. that should be filling dancefloors at the end of the decade, let alone 2010. The new sound features a dense, Dave Fridmann-like production: pumping, parping, squelching sounds familiar to those from The Flaming Lips, or MGMT, but rarely coupled to such strong hooks, or vocal performances, by either.

O.N.E. has a thousand brilliant ideas, reminding you of Cut Copy, Vampire Weekend and The Rapture from moment to moment. There’s a yawing synth that seems borrowed from Radiohead’s Idioteque, to make you pause on the dancefloor, and then a falsetto coda like prime OutKast. Love Me Girl opens like several classic Pet Shop Boys singles at once (the organ from It’s a Sin, the vocal loop from Heart, the house-piano and synth-trumpet fanfares from… oh, you get the idea). Penultimate track Mondegreen might be ghastly on paper, given its chorus: “Everyone’s talking ’bout me an’ my baby / Making love to the morning light / Making love to the morning, to the morning light”. Couple that with handclaps and a blaring sax-riff, though, and somehow it works, like Bowie’s white-soul pastiches.

One website has proclaimed Odd Blood its Most Anticipated Album of 2010, but cautioned that it’s front-weighted with its strongest songs. But rest assured: it’s not until track eight that you get a break, during the acoustic Strange Reunions. And while the closing track is similarly brief, it also manages to suggest our intrepid explorers are heading into something like the Church of the Red Cave (as on the debut) with its dwindling chorus, in search of further inspiration. What comes next, who can say? --Alex Tudor

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CD Description

Yeasayer are a psychedelic rock band from Brooklyn, New York, although the band themselves describe their sound as "Middle Eastern-psych-snap-gospel". 'Odd Blood' was recorded in rural upstate New York and includes the single 'Ambling Amp'.

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
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 (3)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Yeasayer - Odd Blood, the breakthrough album or " diet Animal Collective"?, 1 Feb 2010
By Red on Black (Cardiff) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Odd Blood (Audio CD)
The Amazon editorial review creates a thesis of the classic "game of two halves" when it comes to Yeasayer's new album "Odd Blood". Thus one side of the album is straightforward pop music while the other is more "experimental". A deeper listen of this album suggests that this theory is perhaps a little too orderly and neat.

"All hour cymbals" the debut by Yeasayer is a personal favourite and the songs Sunrise and the epic "2080" (with its "Yeah Yeah" refrain) should be sought out immediately if you have not yet heard the band and their "Middle Eastern-Psych-Pop-Snap-Gospel" (the bands description not mine!). Yeasayer are part of sonic boom that occurred when the Brooklyn conveyor belt started churning a few years back and produced contemporaries like Animal Collective, Grizzly Bear, Dirty Projectors, the Antlers, MGMT and more recently White Rabbits. No one can quite pin down what's happening on the far side of New York's East River with it becoming the "indie" capital of the planet in the same way that Seattle begat "grunge". What we do know it that for many Yeasayer have the potential to the greatest of all these bands. This clearly is a big claim and is it just another large and potentially insurmountable bit of music hype or proper recognition of the huge potential showed on AHC?

"Odd Blood" starts with the "The Children". Its industrial in its feel, has a distorted vox form vocals and is eerie and oppressive. Frankly it would be a bizarre opener to any an album and its not a great start. Its crunchy sludge motif continues into "Amblin Alp" the first single. Suddenly this transforms into the album into electropop dance music with a song chock full of catchy hooks and reggae bounce with a great vocal by Chris Keating. It is the lead single from the album, has been out for months and for some reason reminds me of Heaven 17. It's fine but is it as special as what follows?

The heart of the album comprises three key songs "Madder Red", I Remember and O.N.E. All the anticipation and hype which has gone into "Odd Blood" is fully justified here. "Madder Red" is a guitar led anthem and it's a beast. It's probably the most rock orientated song the band has produced yet and works perfectly. "1 Remember" alternatively is a wall of bubbling synths and much gentler but with Keating's yearning vocal repeating "you're stuck in my mind, all the time". A truly gorgeous collective performance by Anand Wilder, Chris Keating and Ira Wolf Tuton and the best song on the album and with Beach House's "Norway" the best pop song I have heard this year. Next up is "O.N.E" which is destined to be the song of the summer, a joyous roaring pop song that will be remixed to death and which will set the dancers going wild in festivals across Europe (it also could have sat happily on "Dare" by the Human League; anyone detect a theme here?)

Amazon "two halves" theory then falls apart for the next two songs since there is no sharp break. The excellent "Love Me Girl" starts off as a Pet Shop boys style synth riff and then at 1.55 turns in a Prince style funk work out. "Rome" is in many respects one of the most "poppy" songs on the album and is by Yeasayer standards fairly straightforward and very commercial. "Strange Reunions" is probably the darkest song on the album (with the exception of "The Children) and actually reminds of me of Talk Talk. It is a nice change of mood. Alternatively "Mondegreen" is in this reviewer's view a bit of a duffer, the chorus and lyrics could be straight out of a Wham song and before the song ends the relentless wretched hand clapping leads to the fast forward button being pushed. All can be forgiven however with "Grizelda" which sounds like a Bowie song from his "Low" or "Heroes" era and is genuinely lovely and a real favourite.

Have Yeasayer cracked it then? In my view while this album perhaps lacks the haunting depth of "Veckatimest" and the downright sheer exhilaration of "Merriweather", it carves its own niche. The missteps are kept to a minimum (The Children) and "Mondegreen" could have been happily replaced by "Tightrope" from the Dark is the Night compilation. "Odd Blood" is hugely commercial but also has real edge, qualities that they share with mentors Talking Heads. But let us stop rambling, Yeasayer have hit a rich seam with Odd Blood and it will be one of most enjoyable albums of 2010.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Odd Pop Music, 31 Aug 2010
This review is from: Odd Blood (Audio CD)
I can kind of understand why people think this album is too 80's and pop, I had a similar problem on the first few listens.
However if given a chance this album does reveal some really great songs. Certainly better than any other 80's referencing band around at the moment.
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5.0 out of 5 stars yeasayer odd blood, 30 May 2010
This review is from: Odd Blood (Audio CD)
this has got to be the best new music i have heard for a long time.i saw them on jules holland (tv) & though mmmm i`ll try that,bought the record on spec & it has blown me away.................! `i remember` is such a wonderfully haunting peice. people,do uselves a favour......go buy it.........NOW!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Yep. Better, but far from perfect
I won't write long paragraphs about this album but i will say what, IMO, is good and bad about it.

The first track 'the children' i like, as it's an uncoventional and... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Mr. S. Bennett

3.0 out of 5 stars Not essential
Oddly, it bloody reminds me of early 1980's UK pop. Tears For Fears' The Hurting and Japan (such as in The Collection) to be precise. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Stan FREDO

1.0 out of 5 stars "Disappointing" doesn't even come close
Yeasayer had a task to top their brilliant debut, and so quite rightly decided to take an almighty leap in another direction altogether for this follow up... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Adam K.

4.0 out of 5 stars Yeasayer Edge Closer To Greatness
Yeasayer's debut release (2007's 'All Hour Cymbals') was a very promising mix of world beats and accessable pop hooks. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Mr. H Chinaski

4.0 out of 5 stars Strokey Beards And Disco Delirium
Yeasayer's 2007 debut 'All Hour Cymbals' was a lot of fun.
Unselfconscious arthouse rock of almost the highest order. Read more
Published 6 months ago by The Wolf

4.0 out of 5 stars It's Pop Jim, But Not As We Know It (8/10)
So the story goes, the Animal Collective-Odd Blood connection is two-fold.

Firstly, in releasing a very early, much-lauded (whisper it) "album of the year... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Gannon

3.0 out of 5 stars Ambling
I saw the video for Ambling Alp on NMEtv its a fantastic song , got the album because of it, i thought it sounded a little too poppy for me, to be fair i wasnt expecting it to be... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Mr. P. Wood

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