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CD First Impressions Of Earth - The Strokes

Modelo 00BVQ9JO
Fabricante o sello Legacy Recordings
Peso 0.29 Kg.
Precio:   $53,689.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 20-05-2025 y el 28-05-2025
Descripción
-Titulo Original : Audio CD - FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF EARTH - The Strokes

-Fabricante :

Legacy Recordings

-Descripcion Original:

First Impressions On Earth is the third album from the Strokes, and its 14 songs form an extremely persuasive argument that the Strokes are no longer just the most important band of their generation, but also well on their way to becoming one of the worlds biggest bands, period. Features the first single Juicebox. RCA. 2005. Their prospects dangerously over-inflated by pundits who often hailed their debut as nothing short of rock-messianic, New York Citys Strokes got a lesson in cynical rock-press dynamics when their biz-troubled, if similarly toned, 03 follow-up was dutifully dismissed as the proverbial sophomore slump. A lesser band might have been chastened by the experience; this one responds with a third album that positively bristles with energetic challenges. Revolving around a loose concept that allows songwriter/frontman Julian Casablancas to adopt a viewpoint thats as detached as it is world-weary and bemused, its a record that quickly trades the often precious production conceits of its forebears for a muscular confidence thats notable from the infectious, back-to-the-80s opener You Only Live Once to its perfect bookend Red Light. That often inviting sonic remodeling may come in part from Bangles/Sublime/Sugar Ray producer David Kahne (who replaces previous collaborator Gordon Raphael on all but a handful of cuts), but the band clearly has expansiveness on its mind, from a running length nearly twice its predecessors to such stylistic excursions as the cinematic, back-to-the-future riffing of the single Juicebox, the spare, electro-baroque moodiness of Ask Me Anything, and the dense, surprising prog flirtations of Electrocityscape. On the Other Side finds Casablancas convincingly casting himself as the anti-Bono while crooning I hate them, I hate them all, I hate myself for hating them before chiding humanity as seven billion people whove got nothing to say on the otherwise upbeat closer, Red Light. Wrapping such cynicism in more populist musical trappings is no mean feat, and the sheer reach of the Strokes ambitions here insure they occasionally fall short. But its a consistently intriguing effort, one that seems calculated as much to challenge the faithful as expand the bands own considerable horizons. --Jerry McCulley
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