The Shins - Wincing the Night Away
Facts
| Artist(s) | The Shins |
| Studio | Sub Pop |
| Release Date | January 23, 2007 |
| UPC Code | 098787070521 |
| Buy this item | $13.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 30 1:19 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Sleeping Lessons
- Australia
- Pam Berry
- Phantom Limb
- Sea Legs
- Red Rabbits
- Turn On Me
- Black Wave
- Spilt Needles
- Girl Sailor
- A Comet Appears
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User Reviews
Average user review:| I LOVE THIS CD |
| Good, but clearly not their best |
| The Shins will change your life |
On first listen, I liked the first few songs, and thought the rest were OK. With each successive listen, I quickly grew to love this CD, practically to the point of addiction. "Sleeping Lessons" was my early favorite, with "Red Rabbits" now elipsing that in the never-ending stream of Shins songs in my head.
Fantastic CD. Easily within my top 20 favorites of all time. August 11, 2008
| One of the best CD's of 2007 |
This CD is original in it's sound, fun and really entertaining.
The sound is that of British Pop (though the band is from Oregon).
Best tracks are: "Australia", "Phantom Limb", "Red Rabbits" and "Turn on Me".
I rate this as one of the best CD's of 2007. Very enjoyable! August 1, 2008
| The Shins - Wincing The Night Away 8/10 |
Rather than give us another copy of Chutes Too Narrow, the album that, along with everyone's favorite indie-romantic torch film Garden State, propelled the band into the limelight, the Shins present us with an album that at times retains the familiar sound listeners have come to associate with the band and at others stretches their sonic imaginations. Wincing the Night Away attempts to strike a fine balance between experimentation and `60s pop homage, but only halfway fails.
Lead song "Sleeping Lessons," a look at Mercer's chronic insomnia, starts off as most Shins do, quietly and building up a sense of tension. However, where Chutes Too Narrow's "Kissing the Lipless" burst into a sugary electric burst within seconds, the synthesizer and gentle acoustic guitar strums on "Sleeping Lessons" go on for about two and a half minutes until exploding into a typical Shins song, all bouncing drums and Mercer's near falsetto illuminating the way.
Listeners are once again reminded of the Shins' new music ideas with "Sea Legs," not only the longest track of the album at five and a half minutes but also one that radically reinvents what can be called a Shins song. The song is built around a funky bass riff and a drum machine (!), along with strings and synthesizer effects.
While the song is at first relatively catchy and a novel sound for the band, it soon become repetitive and the typically obtuse lyrics turn grating, with Mercer singing non sequiturs like "when the dead moon rises again / we've no time to start a protocol." The song ends anti-climatically with a boring synthesized trip-hop jam.
Wincing the Night Away is also fairly top-heavy. The second half tends to blur together, with songs that sound either too stereotypical Shins ("Girl Sailor") and leave no lasting mark, or are too self-consciously experimental. The most obvious is "Split Needles," which suffers from an annoying synthesizer line and drums mixed way too loudly.
That being said, there are some fine efforts at creating a new sound on Wincing the Night Away, as well as some entertaining examples of the patented Shins "sound" that make for some of their best songs.
"Red Rabbit" is the band's most successful foray into the experimental side of pop music, holding Mercer's strong vocals on a foundation of kitchen-sink sounds that sound like they were taken from an old-school Super Mario soundtrack. A melody from what sounds like an underwater piano accents Mercer's unusually dark lyrics, later accompanied by simple acoustic chords and mimicked applause.
The album's first single, "Phantom Limb," is pop bliss, catchy and refreshing. A simple drum-and-tambourine beat anchor the song, built mostly around Mercer's enchanting vocals and a series of guitar licks, until the song climaxes at the chorus into a harmonized choir of voices.
The best song on the album might also be the best one the Shins have ever recorded. "Australia" begins with a series of "la-la-la's," chiming guitar, and a cheery drumbeat before Mercer's multi-tracked vocals erupt into what may be the quintessential Shins pop tune.
The song is a fusion of all of the Shins' most obvious influences and the band meld these influences into its own creation seamlessly. Much of the credit goes to Mercer, whose singing here is some of the strongest on the album. The lyrics are at first depressing but morph into optimism, with Mercer singing "so give me your hand / and let's jump out of the window" at the song's ending.
All things considered, Wincing the Night Away is a bold step for a band many had come to think of as a one-trick pony. While a few of the songs are musically uninspiring and lacking a sense of direction, many show a heartening change of course that hopefully will be carried over to the next album. Songs like "Phantom Limb" and "Australia," meanwhile, prove that the Shins can still rock like it is 1968 and sound cool while doing it. July 24, 2008
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