Wood/Water

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
After spending six years playing to a small but loyal fringe following of emo kids, the Promise Ring break hearts and stereotypes on their fourth studio album. With the help of producer Stephen Street (Smiths, Blur, Pretenders) and new label Anti- Records (Tom Waits, Merle Haggard), the Milwaukee band sets aside its furrow-browed bedroom angst and embraces whopping Technicolor melodies, elegant guitar rock passages, and an air of confidence that suggests they mean it this time. Wood/Water presents the Promise Ring at their most approachable; it's a gorgeous pastiche of hallowed left-field acts like the Flaming Lips ("Suffer Never"), Weezer ("Get on the Floor"), and a folky Beck ("Letters to the Far Reaches"). The most remarkable track is "Become One Anything One Time," which casts them as the American answer to Travis and delivers the heartbreaking affirmation: "I'm just happy you stuck around." The Promise Ring: clearly worth the wait. --Aidin Vaziri

Album Description
4th full length from the popular band, produced by Stephen Street, who is known fro his work with The Smiths, Blur & The Cranberries. For fans of Jayhawk & Wilco. 2002.

Music Review:

  1. Worldwide
  2. 1039 / Smoothed Out Slappy Hours
  3. A New Morning [Import]
  4. Armed Forces [Extra tracks]
  5. B-Sides & Otherwise
  6. Bad Timing
  7. Beautiful South - Solid Bronze: Greatest Hits [Import]
  8. Blue Cotton Skin
  9. Bring Me to Life [CD-single] [Enhanced]
  10. Brutal Youth

Music Review

music review

Music Review

The School of Rock 'N' Roll: Best of Gary U.S. Bonds

Pleasures

Pituch Plays New Compositions

Music: Shakin' Down the Acorns, Vol. 1

Rip It Up [Import]

Music for Dancing [Import]

Negaigoto [Import]

Singles 1984-2004 [Original recording remastered] [Import]

Psycho Stripper Girlfriend

Psycho Box

Songs from the Rain

Minns Med Thore

Reality Check

Ebony Concerto

Temperance