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Suburban Hymns
Life & Times
Suburban Hymns
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Life & Times
Title: Suburban Hymns
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Desoto
Original Release Date: 1/1/2005
Re-Release Date: 8/9/2005
Genres: Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 643859749029

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CD Reviews

Slow burning fire that renovates the earth
christopher presley | el reno, oklahoma United States | 09/25/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"what a slow burn this baby is...but man it's igniting something grand. this album tricked me. it made me think i didnt like it that much at first. but then, i m an idiot sometimes. most good things in life are have a value that transcends first impressions...sometimes things are so good they take a few minutes to change your tunnel-vision mindset and open your brain to something wonderful. this is one of those things.



i am a GIANT shiner fan and i loved the first LaT EP. the first thing i thought about this album is "too grown up, too happy." but 1: growing up can still be a good thing and 2: is there such a thing as 'too happy?'

the point is this album is full of super-subtle hooks that are like a virus...they get inside you and when you least expect it, you'll be stuck at working thinking you need to hear "Charlotte St." the same way a smoker needs nicotine.



the song construction...the melodies...the whole deal...it's not shiner. it's not old LaT...it's not ANYTHING i've ever heard. so very different and so very majestic."
Rock And Roll Impressionism
W. D. Rupy | Mestrino, PD, Italy | 08/15/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"This sparsely-worded soundtrack to Allen Epley's view of suburbia is beautiful and compelling in a car-crash sort of way, made even stranger by the fact that (as alluded to in 'Mea Culpa') we are all a part of the landscape AE is describing - "come outside and take a look at what's in there where you just were!", basically. Lyrically, this is word economy at its finest and most effective.



Musically, I'll say this: Normally I'm not impressed when bands blatantly wear their musical influences on their sleeve, but that's due to those bands not having anything of their own to say. The Life And Times is definitely NOT in that mold! While it's easy to hear Radiohead's influence (particularly in the opening track, think "Airbag" from OK Computer), as well as War-era U2 on "Coat of Arms" (think "Two Hearts Beat As One"), that to me simply says that the guys liked those particular sounds and thought them best for their respective songs - and made that a point of departure for their own musical statement. (And both those songs work very well indeed, by the way.)



One nitpick, though: After having listened to the cleaner "demo" version of "Shift Your Gaze" pre-release, the overly-murky production of that number as it appears on this CD made me hold back on that 5th star. I think it was a shame to muddle the lyrics, and overall sound, of what could have been more of a figurative momentary break in the clouds.



Still, what a piece of work this is - !!! Fantastic work, gentlemen."
It's a good one
thescalpel | USA | 08/02/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I never get tired of this one. There isn't a single weak component. The bass guitar, vocals, and songwriting are great, and the drumming is outstanding. It's called "suburban hyms" but manages to not be bubbly major key pop about highschool or unlistenable emo-ish garbage about ex-girlfriends. It's solid rock 'n roll so there is none of the plodding slow droning to common in "indie" type stuff, but it has enough of an indie touch to keep the songs from sounding typical at all. The singer passes my standard test of singing in his own voice. He doesn't sound like he's trying to imitate anyone which for some reason is not the norm.



I like it better than the singer's old band "Shiner" because it seems a little smoother and more polished to me. I really don't see how anyone could really dislike this one."