Rock/Pop
LPレコード

Some Loud Thunder

3.5

販売価格

¥
3,790
税込
ポイント15%還元

在庫状況 について

フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2017年11月24日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルCyhsy, Inc.
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 CYH000071
SKU 888608668026

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah's self-released debut album defied the odds and became 2005's biggest indie success story, and their 2007 follow-up was one of the most anticipated releases of the year. SOME LOUD THUNDER was once again released by the band; however, the production values and overall musical scope took a clear step forward. The band brought in studio guru Dave Friedman to flesh out the sound and give a more robust sheen to a group that previously captivated with its lo-fi charms. Luckily, this doesn't undermine that very charm. Frontman Alec Ounsworth still wraps his simple pop confections in eclectic instrumentation and recording trickery. The album begins with a seemingly simple tune made weird by its caked-on, over-heated speaker crackle, while "Satan Said Dance" rides a maelstrom of electronic beats, pops, and hisses straight to the world's most twisted dance floor. Ounsworth still sounds like a more emo David Byrne signing for his life, which, though sometimes overly dramatic, is in fact the only constant on this otherwise warped, glorious mess of a pop album.

  1. 1.[LPレコード]
    1. 1.
      Some Loud Thunder
    2. 2.
      Emily Jean Stock
    3. 3.
      Mama, Won't You Keep Them in Castles in the Air Burning?
    4. 4.
      Love Song No. 7
    5. 5.
      Satan Said Dance
    6. 6.
      Upon Encountering the Crippled Elephant
    7. 7.
      Goodbye to Mother and the Cove
    8. 8.
      Arm and Hammer
    9. 9.
      Yankee Go Home
    10. 10.
      Underwater (You and Me)
    11. 11.
      Five Easy Pieces

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah

オリジナル発売日:2007年

商品の紹介

Rolling Stone (p.67) - 3 stars out of 5 -- The good bits are really good: Dig the goose-bump-raising refrain on 'Yankee Go Home'..." Spin (p.86) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "[T]his set of songs recaptures much of their original nonchalant magic. It's intentionally raw..." Entertainment Weekly (p.123) - "[T]he ragged charm of the band's rickety rhythms and singer Alec Ounsworth's strangled, mournful yelp endures." -- Grade: B- Q (p.99) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[A] mood of playful experimentation is evident throughout." Uncut (p.85) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "There are some brilliant moments here -- notably the winsome drift and melodic starbursts of 'Mercury Walks An Orange Sun/She Arrives In Relative Stitches'."
Rovi

A ton of people had their eyes trained on this sophomore release and it's difficult to give it a fair shake once you've muled-up to the "pre-order" download carrot and subsequent hype. Clap Your Hands Say Yeah's debut was a decent, giddy first album -- not the end-all, be-all, "best indie release ever" that it was willed to be by fans and critics. It was just a good record that fortunate events conspired to elevate beyond its own scope and capabilities. It was over-hyped, plain and simple, and (lord bless 'em) the guys in CYHSY soldiered through it all, and seemed well enough armored to take the gushing praise, smile politely, stick it under their collective hat and then get back to doing what they were doing. This is significant because history says that once your band is hyped that much, you're usually toast. Heads get big, sights get set too high and direction is lost. It's sad, but it's often the way these kinds of "best debut ever" stories play themselves out. The proof in the pudding is, without fail, the second record, with all of its anticipated greatness. Will it exceed expectations? Will it be a blunder? Sometimes it all hinges on number two, and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah's debut follow-up, Some Loud Thunder, comes to plate, visibly sweating under the strain and stress. The opening song (and title track) "Some Loud Thunder," immediately divides the fan base with insanely compressed and distorted production that makes the rest of producer Dave Fridmann's work sound like purist, two-mic, chamber ensemble recordings. It's waaaaaay over the top (it actually physically hurts to listen to it) -- it's not heavy, it's painful -- and that will make it or break it for some folks right there. Hold up though, remember their debut recording started off with some crazy carnival banter -- maybe this is just the weird opener here? It is. There's nothing else on the album that gets to "Some Loud Thunder"'s level of "ouch" and there's even a "non-distorto" version of the tune floating around the download sites for those who can't take the pain. Get past that, and you start getting into the real stuff -- the bulk of which tends toward meandering tension builders that never really take off. Free from label prodding (and polishing) the guys in CYHSY seem to spend a great deal of this album screwing around on trumpets, accordions, and prepared pianos. It sure sounds like they indulged every overdub whim that could be conceived and, at times, it's a bit off-putting for the listener. "Quit screwing around and get back to work...please!" Really, that's good solid advice because when CYHSY apply themselves, good stuff happens. The meandering tension builders ("Emily Jean Stock," "Love Song No. 7," the indulgent instrumental "Upon Encountering the Crippled Elephant," "Goodbye to Mother and the Cove," and "Five Easy Pieces") all have their moments, but there's definitely an unfinished and tentative feel here. It sounds like a band accompanying a singer/songwriter who can't fully let go of that riveting coffeehouse spotlight. On the aforementioned songs, you could strip away all the incidental noodling and end up with a decent singer/songwriter record. It seems, in an effort to sound more sophisticated (read, serious) CYHSY have kind of taken a step backward. It's not all like this, though. There are moments of brilliance, both musically and lyrically, and they are all contained in the tunes that are the most realized. "Mama, Won't You Keep Them Castles in the Air and Burning?" makes this list, if only for the thoughtful lyrics of Alec Ounsworth. "Arm and Hammer" is where things really start to coalesce. There's still a lot of spontaneous creativity at work here, but it's wrangled in enough to give the tune a sense of purpose. Lyrically, this one's on a mission and it succeeds in being a nice, bitter "F***k Off!!" as well as an affirming manifesto. "Yankee Go Home" is quite good -- maybe the most fully realized thing on the w to be continued...
Rovi

〈名盤〉と謳われたファースト・アルバムを軽々と超えてしまった。ここまで完璧なものを前にすると感動や驚きの言葉は失われ、思わず沈黙してしまう。CYHSYの2作目を超えるものがこの先10年間、世界中どのインディー・シーンからも出てくるとは到底考えられないからだ。プロデューサーにデイヴ・フリッドマンを迎えて、既存のローファイ感にサイケなフィルターを通した感覚はまるで〈21世紀のヴェルヴェット・アンダーグラウンド〉! 奇妙に歪んだポップなメロディーが、ファンタジックなノイズに彩られてユラユラと美しくダンスする。米国ではいまだレーベル契約を持たない彼らは間違いなく異端であり、売れるバンドの定説を完全に無視した存在である。しかしすでにフォロワーまで生まれている事実は、彼らが新時代のロック・スターであることを物語っているのではないか。全人類必聴の傑作・・この言葉を初めて使うときがきた。
bounce (C)冨田 明宏
タワーレコード(2007年01,02月号掲載 (P89))

メンバーズレビュー

2件のレビューがあります
3.5
0%
50%
50%
0%
0%
デビッドバーンの歌い方がツボなら間違いなし!?1stは文句なく名盤ですが、2nd名盤説が最近浮上。①⑤⑨がおすすめ。
2020/05/10 NMさん
0
コレは!!!の新譜を買いに行ったら試聴機に入ってたので聴いてみたら良かった。!!!では無くコッチの方をつい買ってしまった。面白いセンスをしてるし曲調もバラエティに富んでいる。ハーフジャパニーズが好きな人に良いかも。しかしボートラを入れても収録時間は50分位だけど聴いてるとダレるし飽きてくる。後半はツマラナイ曲も出てくるし…少し冗長な曲をコンパクトにするべきだと思ったし曲を吟味して数を絞るべきだったとも思う。ボートラを入れても11曲だけなんだけど…
2007/02/04 QTAROさん
0

読み込み中にエラーが発生しました。

画面をリロードして、再読み込みしてください。