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Sound of Silver
A**N
Disappointing All the Way Through
A surprisingly poor effort. Very little musical imagination here - just a lot of energetic repetitions of the same, quickly tedious notes. And the lyrics sound like something a couple of overwrought freshman would come up with on a late, Saturday night - not even sophomoric, more high-schoolic, just emphasizing the normal, indulgent stuff 18 year old boys emphasize when they're trying to create art. I'm much more familiar with their later album, THIS IS HAPPENING, which is a lot of fun, and an album I'd recommend, even though it also has a lot of freshman level lyrics. But this work - if you want to call it that - isn't even fun, it's just overblown, using lots of energy to sound as if it's something more than it really is.
E**Y
An indie watershed
Albums like Sound of Silver shouldn't be made anymore. Listeners of the indie generation lost a feel a while ago for a great straight-through album, even one composed of universally well made songs. Sound of Silver, though, doesn't remind me of other indie albums, despite its love of the modern-techno dance beats of the reinvented 80s-sound that's permeated indie music the last few years. Instead, it reminds me of the Stones' Let It Bleed or the Who's Who's Next for a new generation. Almost monolithically focused on the pains and pangs of aging and accepting adulthood, Sound of Silver is the type of album that forges an idea and pushes it so compulsively from one song to the next, you're almost immediately aware that you're in the type of album you never hear anymore - yet sonically, it's so advanced and up to the moment, lyrically so pointed and clever, it could only be made right now. "Get Innocuous," its 7 minute opener plunges you into beats so all-encompassing you don't notice what it seems to really, lyrically, be talking about - a fight to keep yourself from getting old. That theme pops up again and again - from the loss that clouds "Someone Great" to the pounding, brilliant manifesto "All My Friends" that separates the album into two. What are you to make of, say, "Sound of Silver" that has exactly one line ("Sound of silver talk to me/ makes you want to feel like a teenager/ until you remember the feelings of a real live emotional teenager/ then you think again") plunged into an absolute techno maelstrom? That you're happy to be a little older and wiser and more stable, and still capable of dancing all night. If any theme deserved a great album, it's that one, and it found its home.
G**N
Fun Music!
LCD Soundsystem had somehow escaped my attention until I read a review in Rolling Stone Magazine not too long ago. Everything they said pointed to me liking this CD. Sure enough, I ordered it and I love it! It's catchy, melodic, beat heavy and hook laden. In places it has strange electronic sounds and gimmicks that play with your ears and your mind. It has wonderful vocals and multi-layered harmonies, including an utterly charming female background vocalist that wails and yelps a few additions to a couple of the tracks. James Murphy and company presents a wonderful array of danceable electronica music. In listening, I'd say it is very modern and unique but it also has a retro feel. In places, it sounds somewhat like a friendly battle between Devo and Talking Heads, two of the quirkiest bands of the New Wave era.All the tracks are quite good and it would be difficult to rank them. My favorite track, however, is "North American Scum." Somehow it has a very amateurish sound, but it's playful, happy and uplifting at the same time. It's a wonderful combination and the vocals are especially good on this track. If I had to somehow pick the weakest track, ironically it would be "Sound of Silver," the song that provides the title to the album. One song that really stands out as atypical of the entire album is the melancholy "New York, I love You but You're Bringing Me Down." It's a great song and, strangely enough, provides a wonderful close to the album.Altogether, this CD provides catchy, quirky and uplifting dance music. It's fun. When I listen, I have a smile on my face. That's my kinda music.
C**R
I find myself listening to this album...over and over again!
I bought this album on a whim after hearing North American Scum on the radio, and fell in love with it ever since! Basically, if you enjoy indie/alternative/techno/experimental music, this album doesn't disappoint.What's great is that each song has it's own unique feeling. You've got your dance-driven tracks like Get Innocuous, Us V Them, and more mellow tracks like Someone Great, and the ballad-like New York I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down. Even after my first listening, I could distinguish songs apart, and it didn't all "blend together". I'm not familiar with anything off of LCD Soundsystem's debut album, but after listening to Sound of Silver, I'm looking into buying that too.At only $6.00 for the MP3 Album download, it's well worth the money!Best tracks: Get Innocuous!, Time To Get Away, North American Scum, Us V Them, Watch the Tapes, Sound of SilverIf you fall in love with this album like I did, I would also recommend LCD Soundsystem's A Bunch of Stuff EP, which contains great remixes of the songs on here.
D**R
One good song does not an album make
I bought this because I heard the song "North American Scum." That song is witty and catchy. The rest of the album, not so much. More like a repetitive snooze.
L**L
Great from the start
I'm by no means an expert on how to appreciate music, but I must say I was really impressed with Sound of Silver's quality. There were a few songs that I enjoyed from LCD Soundsystems first release, but those took a bit of time for me to get into. Sound of Silver got me right from the start in a way I haven't experienced from a CD for some time. Normally I expect to have to give some time for a CD to grow on me, but this one didn't require any extra effort. Having said that, I know a few of the songs will not have a great deal of staying power in my "everyday playlist", but enough of them do that I would strongly recommend this CD. "Get Innocuous!", "North American Scum", and "All My Friends" all deserve the positive attention they've been given and I know I will continue to enjoy them for years to come.
C**R
Glam/Punk/Disco/Electro Masterpiece
A magic trip of a record that sources everyone from Bowie, Eno and Can to early Human League and Glam-era pop, such as The Sweet, and throws in some punk attitudes as well. It's poetic, prophetic as well as plugging itself into some of the most influential periods in pre and post punk music history.This record sounds so European it is a surprise to hear the members of the band speak. Full on American accents all round but oh so aware of the in built attitudes and prejudices of western Europeans towards North Americans. To this end `North American Scum' is the catchiest, funniest and driest single of the year. One of those albums you play every week and there is always something else to find in it, no wonder it's on the top 10 listings of nearly every music journalist for 2007.
J**R
Got this for "Someone Great".
I haven't gotten around to listening to this all the way through yet, but its worth the price of the ticket just for "Someone Great". Nuff said.
P**R
Great Product
Arrived in great condition as expected.
J**D
Never to late to get into LCD
Got into this recently, after seeing the final farewell show/film & loved it.
L**X
Get lost in sound
Love this album
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