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The Seldom Seen Kid

The Seldom Seen KidArtist: Elbow
Label: Polydor Group
Category: Music

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £3.90 (On sale from £3.94)
as of 22/5/2012 19:31 CDT details
You Save: £0.04 (1%)

New (41) Used (17) from £1.53

Seller: all your music

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Running Time: 56 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.9 x 0.4

UPC: 602517640986
EAN: 0602517640986

Release Date: March 17, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Starlings
  • The Bones Of You
  • Mirrorball
  • Grounds For Divorce
  • An Audience With The Pope
  • Weather To Fly
  • The Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver
  • The Fix - Elbow, Richard Hawley
  • Some Riot
  • One Day Like This
  • Friend Of Ours
  • We're Away

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
There are few things in life quite so liberating as the opening track on an Elbow album--they're like airlocks between the plainness of the outside world and the elaborate melancholic heave-ho that you are likely about to submerge yourself in. Following predecessors "Any Day Now", "Ribcage" and "Station Approach", "Starlings" opens their fourth album The Seldom Seen Kid rising from a bed of tumbling electronic subtlety like a depressed Atari game loading up, adding bare touches of piano, glimpses of ambient guitar, out of body background vocals, an understated pulse and a wisp of strings, before--EXCELSIS!--a fanfare avalanche of horns crashes the gate and elevates things to gasping palatial heights, before Guy Garvey's inimitable gravel tone and wrenchingly poetic reinterpretations of the everyday announce their arrival proper. It's astonishing, by far the most progressive moment on the album and if anything it sets the bar too high. But even when the pace dips, and songs like "Mirrorball" and "Weather to Fly" don't distinguish themselves quite enough, their textural peerlessness remains. This is a beautiful sounding record. Their collaboration with Richard Hawley may be more of a curiosity than a thing of beauty, but the highs, the riffing cross-stitch of "Ground for Divorce", the desolate grandeur of "The Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver" and the enlightened string-laden anthem "On a Day Like This" (like their own Sound of Music--only substitute the Alpine peaks for a Manchester high-rise) number amongst the best of their career. --James Berry


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