Home Archery Boating Camping & Hiking Canoeing & Kayaking Climbing  
  What are you shopping for?  



 

In Our Bedroom After the War

In Our Bedroom After the War
MSRP: $14.98
Your Price: $13.99
Savings: $ 0.99 ( 7% )
Shipping: N/A
Manufacturer: Arts & Crafts
Buy In Our Bedroom After the War

Prices subject to change. Please verify price during checkout.
 

Related In Our Bedroom After the War Products

the Our After Bedroom In War
Bedroom After Our War In the
Bedroom After the In War Our
Our the After Bedroom In War
Our the In After War Bedroom
 

Additional In Our Bedroom After the War Information

On September 25, Stars will release their fourth studio album, In Our Bedroom After The War. It’s Stars’ most confident and compelling work to date, an album that showcases the seven years of experience they share as a band. It was recorded at the Warehouse Studios in Vancouver, BC and mixed by Joe Chiccarelli (The White Stripes, The Shins, Morrissey). For a limited time, In Our Bedroom After The War will include a bonus DVD featuring a 55-minute documentary of Stars’ live performances and interviews while touring Set Yourself on Fire.

 

What Customers Say About In Our Bedroom After the War:

Buy it. This is the real thing - unpretentious, blissful pop. It's just awesome. Forget the Arcade Fire. "Take Me To The Riot" is simply on of the best indie songs I've heard in years.

I got this for a Stars/Indie friend of mine and she loved it. I like the covering/ no stupid jewel case to break and bust.

Blending interesting lyrics with synthpop sensibilities, a flare for the dramatic, and dueling male and female vocalists, Stars is hard to quantify, except that they are excellent. It is one of the lighter songs in the collection, but quite nice for what it is. "Barricade" is a piano ballad in the likes of Ben Folds, but with lyrics that stand in stark contrast to the music. Poignant and richly rewarding, each song is something of a vignette of life. "My Favorite Book" slips into a 70s beat with understated vocals that is quite pretty.

"Take Me To The Riot," has an intense rocker feel, sort of The Cure blended with Arcade Fire, with the piano sweetly singing in the background. "The Ghost of Geneva Heights," is slow and intimate, with a beat that is re-imagined 70s with a grunge heaviness. Meet me at the barricade. Dark, beautiful, poetic, and addicting: "There's only darkness at the finish. I'll be at the barricade. What Stars does better than almost all Indie contenders is fluidly blend musical styles without seeming nothing more than a musical collage. I now own all their albums, including their strange little release SAD ROBOTS from November 2008.

Their newest album, IN OUR BEDROOM AFTER THE WAR, is darker than previous albums, which lyrics that can tear at the listener's heart. It is probably this reviewer's favorite, full of dark humor and brilliant intensity. 4.5/5, and a must buy for any serious Indie fan. The love dies, but the hate can't fade." A collection of songs diverse in style but equally well done, the album is a perfect review of Stars' varied and quality musical styles. Stars is the best band that I had never heard of until this year. Some border on fine art in their quality of writing, even worthy of adaptation into short fiction. Carefully minor key, this song grows better on each listening.

Prefab Sprout, Electronic, Sundays, Everything But The Girl, even Cure: the intelligent melodic music of Northern England is shimmering inside every song. On the other side, I bet that Campbell & Co. They are intelligent without being cerebral. There are many other songs that are pitch-perfect, efficient and honest. Stars are not there yet. "My Favorite Book" and "Personal" are in this class. I felt that "Bitches in Tokyo" and the titular song were enjoyable but gratuitous and detract from the overall experience.

When you have 10 dry, powerful, needed songs from a Canadian rock band what you get is Neon Bible. At its best, the band has the innocence and urgency of a teen-ager finding the right words for the first time. It's just a matter of time until the perfect album. But they have potential for greatness, and they already have several excellent songs in their repertoire.I heard that the band is very selective in its choice of material. "The Night Starts Here" and "Take me to the Riot" are memorable and enthusing. All members have metabolized the two pillars of 80s British pop-rock -- Smiths and New Order -- so thoroughly that they don't need to copy them, they just exude them. cannot locate Bristol on the map, and listen to Portishead or Tricky only when they are in wrist-slitting mode.Why this long introduction.

They sit of the wide shoulders of Bernard Sumner and Morrissey without plagiarizing them. But, when they are short on ideas, the songs flounder. I hope they could be just a bit more selective. For Stars, the nineties never happened. Because this heritage seems Stars' strength and weakness. They go on melodic 80s autopilot.

It was pure coincidence: they were opening for Death Cab For Cutie in Orlando and only later did I learn that they were a spinoff of Broken Social Scene (one of my favorite bands today).With "In Our Bedroom After the War" they build up on the brilliance of "Set Yourself on Fire," delivering a solid album that keeps you engaged with the smooth vocals where male and female almost play with each other, alongside with the fantastic arrangements that depart from what you may be more used to listening these days.There is practically no weak moments in the entire album, making it easily one of the best ones to be published in 2007. Stars was a band that I loved at first listen. Also highly recommendable is their 2008 EP, "Sad Robots."

Buy In Our Bedroom After the War
© 2006 - 2010 AlphaeBiz.com - Sporting Goods : Privacy Policy