Track Listings
| 1. Section 11 ( A Long Day Continues/ We Sound Amazed) |
| 2. Section 12 ( Hold Me Now) |
| 3. Section 13 ( Diamonds/ Mild Devotion To Majesty) |
| 4. Section 14 ( Two Thousand Places) |
| 5. Section 15 ( Ensure Your Reservation) |
| 6. Section 16 ( One Man Show) |
| 7. Section 17 ( Suitcase Calling) |
| 8. Section 18 (Everything Starts At The Seam |
| 9. Section 19 ( When The Fool Becomes A King |
| 10. Section 20 ( Together We're Heavy |
| 11. Bonus Section 1 ( The Best Part) |
| 12. Bonus Section 2 ( Mercury Tea) |
| 13. Bonus Section 3 ( Working Out The Kinks. Demo 2002) |
Together We're Heavy,The Polyphonic Spree,Japanese Import,Chamber Pop,Indie Rock,Neo-Psychedelia,Pop,Rock
Average customer rating:
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Together We're Heavy
The Polyphonic Spree Manufacturer: Japanese Import ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000219PQW Release Date: 2004-08-17 |
Tracks:
Customer Reviews:
Heavy, man.......2004-07-13
A chorus of very faint voices and a harp explode into an orchestral psychedelic roar. And that's just the first minute of the rippling opener "Section 11 (A Long Day Continues/We Sound Amazed)." They're on more solid footing with the guiltily upbeat "Section 12 (Hold Me Now)," the quivery poppy ballad "Section 13 (Diamonds/Mild Devotion To Majesty)" and the string-laden "Section 15 (Ensure Your Reservation)."
The Polyphonic Spree manage to expand their horizons a little with the startlingly catchy "Section 14 (Two Thousand Places)" and the bouncy "Section 18 (Everything Starts At The Seam)." The climax of it all is "Section 19 (When The Fool Becomes A King)," a sprawling 10-minute epic that barely avoids being bloated by constantly changing song styles.
Together We're Heavy proves the old saying about how if it ain't broke, don't fix it. The Polyphonic Spree won their fans with their psychedelic feel-good pop, not to mention songs about how the "trees wanna grow," and assuring you that the world is a nice place and that "everything... will be fine." Here, they stick with that formula -- they just smooth out the sound and make the music a bit richer and deeper.
The saggiest point would be the opener, which overstays its welcome by about three minutes. But after that, things even out nicely. The instrumentation has a lushness and richness that is rarely seen in most music -- lots of piano, the occasional guitar, swollen strings, ghostly synth, some harp and, of course, lots of horns. Even if the don't-worry-be-happy songwriting is too sugary for you, the panoramic sweeps of swirling melody will keep you happy.
The feel-good lyrics are still EXTREMELY simple, somewhere between a complex lullaby and a simple pop song. Not to mention perky. "Stranger to the sun/you see the light!" the chorus announces over and over in the penultimate song. But they do expand on their songwriting, as they do in the more melancholy story-song "Section 16 (One Man Show)."
The Polyphonic Spree refine and reflect on "Together We're Heavy," but don't lose the swirling orchestral medleys and upbeat tone that make people like them. Fun and upbeat.
We are all kings tonight.......2004-07-05
Music: