Unwind

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
This fine follow-up to Oleander's gold-selling 1999 effort, February Son, finds the quartet coming into their own, forging an identity in an often-faceless pop-rock field populated by the likes of Collective Soul and Candlebox. Fronted by the dynamic Thomas Flowers, the group has blossomed from their Nirvana-lite roots into something more original and expansive. Witness the darkly evocative "Are You There?" which moves easily into "Halo," a lilting ballad rife with strings. From the funky and spare "Benign" to the rah-rah rave-up "Jimmy Shaker Day" to the soaring and soulful, Lenny Kravtiz-like "Tightrope," there's nary a loser to be found. Unwind is most interesting on the harder-edged songs such as the raucous but taut "She's Up, She's Down." With stellar production, thoughtful arrangements, and well-crafted songs, Unwind is the kind of album that fans and radio programmers alike can embrace. The Sacramento-bred band may be named after a poisonous flower, but this burgeoning bunch is anything but toxic. --Katherine Turman

Music Review:

  1. Vulnerable [Enhanced]
  2. Wake Up [Import]
  3. Welcoming Home The Astronauts
  4. Westing (By Musket and Sextant)
  5. What I Learned About Ego, Opinion, Art & Commerce [Enhanced]
  6. Why Does the Sun Shine? [CD-single] [EP]
  7. Workers Playtime
  8. You Are the Quarry [Enhanced]
  9. 24 Hours a Day
  10. Across the Broad Atlantic [Live]

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Sleeps Like a Curse [Import]

Mussorgsky/Ravel: Pictures at an Exhibition

Melartin: Symphonies

Music: Midievalization

Ministry of Sound: Australian Tour 1997 [Import] [Live]

Love's Arrival

Personal Juke Box [Import]

Odessey & Oracle: 30th Anniversary Edition

Make You Move

Live, Vol. 1 [Live]

Nude & Rude: The Best of Iggy Pop

Nightcap [Import]

Maximum Rap

Counterpoint Sings Noel

Paper Moon