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Everything All the Time

Everything All the Time

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Artist: Band Of Horses
Label: Sub Pop
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $13.49
You Save: $0.49 (4%)



New (52) Used (11) from $8.00

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 62 reviews
Sales Rank: 1543

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 690
UPC: 098787069020
EAN: 0098787069020
ASIN: B000E6GBV2

Release Date: March 21, 2006
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
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Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • The First Song
  • Wicked Gil
  • Our Swords
  • The Funeral
  • Part One
  • The Great Salt Lake
  • Weed Party
  • I Go to the Barn Because I Like The
  • Monsters
  • St. Augustine

Similar Items:

  • Cease to Begin
  • Wincing the Night Away
  • Boxer
  • The Shepherd's Dog
  • In Rainbows

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
This Seattle-based band was formed from the ashes of the incredibly talented Carissa's Wierd [sic], whose mopey and self-deprecating songs were like some magical and baroque combination of the Magnetic Fields, Cat Power, and Leonard Cohen. Longtime friends of Iron and Wine, few fans in their native Pacific Northwest could understand why Carissa's weren't huge. But they weren't, and after three albums and few folks really caring, they naturally broke up. Band of Horses, led by ultra-charming CW bassist Ben Bridwell, is a remarkably different, though just as radically excellent, brand of indie-pop sulk. These songs are anthems to ambivalence, and Bridwell's lovely high-pitched trill will please any fan of Built to Spill, the Shins, and Modest Mouse. It takes a few listens to sink in, but Everything is transcendent, shimmering, layered, and smartass emo-pop fully ready for stadium saturation. --James Conde

Album Description
Guitarist/vocalist Ben Bridwell and bassist Mat Brooke formed Band Of Horses in 2004 after the dissolution of their nearly ten-year run in northwest melancholic darlings Carissa's Wierd. Carissa's Wierd trafficked in sadly beautiful orchestral pop, whose songs told unflinching stories of heartbreak and loss, leavened with defeatist humor. Band Of Horses rises from those ashes. Buoyed by Bridwell's warm, reverb-heavy vocals (which channel a strange brew of Wayne Coyne, Neil Young, and Doug Martsch), the group's woodsy, dreamy songs ooze with amorphous tension, longing, and hope. Both raggedly epic and delicately pensive, this is an album painted gorgeously in fragile highs and lows.


Customer Reviews:   Read 57 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Band of Horses   August 27, 2008
Great music. I bought this CD after I bought Cease to Begin by the same artist. The two CDs by Band of Horses have been a regular in my CD player ever since. I highly recommend Band of Horses.


5 out of 5 stars Great band, must check these guys out at least once!   August 12, 2008
I am a fan of indie / folk music such as Hayden, Richard Buckner, Mark Kozelek (of Red House Painters / Sun Kil Moon) and Kathleen Edwards, just for a sample of my music tastes... This band is growing on me more and more with every listen of the music that I have found so far.

I fully expect to attend a concert of theirs in the future. It's best described in my own words as a sound of "The Shins" mixed in with "Coldplay" with a dash of "Racounters"...Very good!



5 out of 5 stars sublime   May 8, 2008
Some of the negative critiques of this record mystify me. Sure, the lead singer is reminiscent of Neil Young and My Morning Jacket, but so what? Every song is sublime. I can't stop playing this record. Buy it. And while you're at it, check out Sera Cahoone's terrific album, Only As the Day is Long. (She's the drummer on this record.)


5 out of 5 stars Super   April 30, 2008
I without a doubt loved this album.
I can't say anything bad about it. You need to hear Band of Horses.



4 out of 5 stars Pure pop goodness...   April 11, 2008
is an apt synopsis of this album. Not breaking major new ground, but somehow managing to create a classic sound, Band of Horses sounds like Brian Wilson's slightly melancholy, introspective brother who also likes Ride; creating sing-a-long-y sad pop gems infulenced by roots rock, alt-country, and dare i say it, gloom-pop. Somehow they make this sound important and meaningful and it's hard not to like the swirling melodies of "Wicked Gil" or the intimate, disarming folk of "St. Augustine". Sublime Anglo pop for today.

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