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Which of these was the better album?

  1. 1. Bright Eyes - Conor Oberst

    • I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning
      0
    • Digital Ash In A Digital Urn
      0

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CULTURE BOX:
*** AMERICAN MUSIC CLUB ***



As Conor Oberst releases the new hugely awaited Bright Eyes album Cassadaga, a poll to see which side of Oberst's musical vibes people liked the best of, whether it was the more acousticly I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning and the more electronicly Digital Ash In A Digital Urn

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/57/Brighteyes.imwideawakeitsmorning.albumcover.jpg


Bright Eyes-Easy/Lucky/Free :down:




http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a6/Bright_Eyes_-_Four_Winds.jpg




Bright Eyes - Four Winds :up:


Bright Eyes new album gets five stars in the independent :down: :down:!!!

Bright Eyes, Cassadaga
Reviewed by Andy Gill in the Independent
Published: 06 April 2007


With Cassadaga, the prodigiously talented Conor Oberst confirms what many have thought for several years now, that he is the most gifted and intelligent lyricist under 30 working in America - and possibly anywhere - today. It's also, on a purely musical level, the most complete album that his Bright Eyes combo have created, the range and beauty of the arrangements largely attributable to Oberst's main co-conspirators, producer/ mandolinist/ pedal steel guitarist Mike Mogis, and pianist/trumpeter Nate Walcott, who furnishes the evocative string and woodwind arrangements that bring to life such lines as "everything is eclipsed by the shape of destiny" and "...just vanished into a thick mist of change".

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/8/84/Bright_Eyes_-_Cassadaga.jpg


Cassadaga - the title refers to a community of psychics in Florida - is wreathed in intimations of destiny and change, strung taut between the idea of eternity and an increasing sense of urgency, as Oberst attempts to tackle the growing mountain of pressing issues facing today's sensitive liberal songwriter, from global warming and social disintegration to destructive fundamentalism, while retaining some clear notion of his own history and place. It involves a whistle-stop tour of America, from Cassadaga itself to the Dakota badlands, bloodstained scene of atrocities against Native Americans, and from Babylonian Los Angeles to "the new pyramids down in old Manhattan", where "from the roof of a friend's, I watched an empire ending".

It would be wrong, though, to imagine this is a sombre album. True, "No One Would Riot for Less" has the hushed mood of early Leonard Cohen, and "Middle Man" the haunted tone of a traditional ballad; but for the most part Oberst's natural ebullience is reflected in the rousing country-rock arrangements of violin, guitar and organ, exemplified by the infectious, singalong single "Four Winds", where the see-sawing fiddle tugs the song along in the manner of The Waterboys.

A host of alt.rock friends, including M Ward, Rachael Yamagata, members of Sleater-Kinney, Rilo Kiley and Tortoise, and Gillian Welch & David Rawlings, help out on Cassadaga, but not in the manner of glittering adornments familiar from exercises such as the Timbaland album. Few are recognisable through the music alone, and all strive to conceal themselves for the good of the material, which is understandable with material this good. After all, who'd want to trample over lines as wise as "Every dream gets whittled down/Just like every fool gets wise"? Wise words, indeed
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also while we are on the subject, what otherSaddle Creek artists do you like?

 

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/f3/Saddlecreeklogo.gif

 

and you can include sub-labels like Team Love and artists like Tilly and the wall (esp Tilly and the wall :lol: )

 

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d3/Tillies.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

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