Search - Grizzly Bear :: Horn of Plenty (w/Bonus Remixes)

Horn of Plenty (w/Bonus Remixes)
Grizzly Bear
Horn of Plenty (w/Bonus Remixes)
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (17) - Disc #2


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Grizzly Bear
Title: Horn of Plenty (w/Bonus Remixes)
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Kanine Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 11/8/2005
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Styles: Indie & Lo-Fi, Progressive, Progressive Rock
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPCs: 827175001522, 827175015222

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CD Reviews

This is a song for you
E. A Solinas | MD USA | 07/14/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

""Horn of Plenty" is an odd debut album for a band, since it was created before the band proper existed.



Instead, the first Grizzly Bear album is largely the efforts of Ed Droste, and he spreads himself over several genres -- freakfolk, pop, psychedelica and post-rock, layered together into gentle, hypnotic melodies. It's like sitting through a fuzzy, colourful dream and waking just in time for the remixes.



It opens with strange animal noises, and a reverberent hum... and a gentle guitar under a thin layer of murmuring keyboard. It sounds like someone doped Grandaddy. "I'm a deep sea diver with my fins/and underneath your current I do swim," Droste murmurs distantly. "I'm a deep sea diver losing air/and around here I'm sad swimming/you don't care..."



Things get slightly more upbeat in the gentle tripfolk of "Don't Ask" ("I fell into your arms that night/Don't ask"), before trickling into a series of fuzzy, gentle songs: exotic scratchy electropop, fluting indie-rock, ghostly ballads, lo-fi tunes that sound like they were recorded over a walkie-talkie, and shifting epics of shimmering freakfolk. It all finishes up with "This Song," a gentle guitar pop melody that may have a beat, but is as drowsy as a lullaby.



And this release has a second disc of remixed songs, which gives the mellow songs new twists -- jangling strings, a psychedelic reworking, funky dance beats, gentle electronic waves, maracas, grimy rock edges, carnival rock, hard techno, and what sounds like radio static. And these are all done by some brilliant artists -- Final Fantasy, Dntel, Ariel Pink, Efterklang, the Castanets, Alpha, Solex and Safety Scissors.



Grizzly Bear doesn't sound anything like its name would imply -- no rough edges, no rock, no wildness. Just very soothing, mellow fuzz-folk and gently lo-fi indie-postrock, which sounds like a worn-out, half-asleep freakfolker slowly drifting out to sea, in a mist of dreams. Yes, it's that endearing and pretty, but without an ounce of pretension.



Musically, it's layered like the Grand Canyon. At the core, it's made up of gentle guitar riffs and wandering acoustic melodies, but then Droste quietly weaves different sounds over it -- a haze of fuzz, ghostly synth, rattling drums, gentle keyboard melodies, some squiggling vinyl and crackling radio sounds, and a sprinkling of bells, tambourines, flutes, birdsong and other little sounds.



Droste does the same thing with his mellow, gentle, sad voice -- in "Showcase" he layers, echoes and harmonizes with himself, until it sounds like a chorus of Drostes are melting into the powerful melody. Lyrics are almost superfluous, but Droste spins a series of bittersweet songs about wishing that you hadn't lost someone ("My chest hurts a lot tonight/Maybe you can fix that... And when I walk on by, I see you waving...").



Grizzly Bear's debut album is a fuzzy, mournful little gem, and the bonus disc of remixes is pretty good too. Bittersweet, dreamlike and thoroughly enchanting."
Sweet.
Robert M. Flynn | Albany, NY | 04/13/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"That first track Deep Sea Diver.

Oh man.

That is so sweet when that electric guitar comes in at the end there.

It's underwater space time...you know what I'm talking about. That sweet sweet spot.

And then the whole rest of the album.

Not a bad song on it.

I like their second album as well, but not as much...as this one.

Sounds like nothing else. Sounds like the inside of my brain.



I've had this album for a couple of years now, so I didn't get the remixes. I heard em. They're ok. A nice little treat, but the album its self...finds its way in to CD player...often.

"