Thao and company don't play regular ol' folk rock songs, they have a distinctive sound, and on WE THE COMMON every song finds a way to be interesting. Guitars get in your face on "City" but there's still room for stuff like vibraphones and a cappella singing. "We Don't Call" features honking saxophones. A hillbilly unison singer brings the twang on "Kindness Be Conceived," followed by "The Day Long," with it's noir tone and bouncing bass and snare combo, followed by needling, high register guitar work and Thao singing about not getting "naked enough" on "Every Body."
You get the picture. WE THE COMMON is a patchwork quilt of interesting folk rock and-singer songwriter choices bound together by a unifying theme of simply making creative, personal, and passionate music. With so much variety and so many points of interest in this collection of songs, the album and even the band itself (with its unique and memorable band name) exude a sort of collaborative, joy-of-music persona that's contagious and that makes WE THE COMMON less like a formal "album" and more like a very cool party with some very musical friends. Check these guys out.
5 Comments
cherry bomb
2/14/2013 11:34:00 pm
just listened- this shit is awesome
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jenny
2/15/2013 12:09:48 am
going in my ipod right now
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denzel
2/15/2013 04:59:37 am
hhm this is pretty unique music
Reply
Harold
2/16/2013 07:43:46 am
Just listened pretty good stuff
Reply
Don
2/16/2013 07:45:28 am
Not my thing
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