Editorial Reviews
Music Review:
Music Review
Music: Old Codes, New Chaos [Import]
Feel/ Go Dream - Yuna & Tidus (Final Fantasy X) [Soundtrack] [Import]
Amazonas Familia Jobim [Import]
Beethoven: Variations, Dances & Bagatelles
Complete ESP-Disk Recordings [Original recording remastered]
Amazon.com
Here's an awesome album for floating around back country roads in an old Volvo station wagon. This is folk-based pop music that's meditative, fun, and deliriously repetitive. If you've never heard the Fruit Bats, imagine a less ambitious version of the Shins, a well-worn copy of American Beauty replacing Seventeen Seconds on the turntable, and you're pretty close. If you're a devotee, you should know that Gillian Lisee is not on this record. In her stead we have Dan Strack, who played with principal singer-songwriter Eric Johnson in the poorly named but excellent band I, Rowboat. Spelled is a minor shift towards bigger things: the themes are more cosmic and the music sounds less like the product of bedroom strumming than before. "Earthquake of '73," "Lives of Crims" and "Born in the 70s" these are big, beautiful, elegiac songs. Stick em in a popular romantic comedy and watch this band become household names. Mike McGonigal
Album Description
Around the release of "Mouthfuls", Harp magazine described the Fruit Bats as residing somewhere on a continuum between Califone and The Shins, combining "...the latter's widescreen vision with the former's melodic knack to create something at once familiar and new." This is Eric Johnson's enlightened Romantic opus - in the 18th century English literary sense of the term. With an emphasis on the bigger picture of life as it relates to nature's organic relationship to man and irrational, spontaneous moments of beauty and rebirth, "Spelled In Bones" proffers warm, thoughtful, bittersweet pop that's as hopeful as it is curious.