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This band was f'ing amazing live. Every song on this album is very listenable, it just chills you out, but it still rocks.
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A bandmember's departure normally brings change in its wake, but for Stars of Track and Field it heralded not the expected arrival of a new bassist, but a shift in their very sound and modus operandi. The remaining trio members threw themselves headlong into the digital age, making new use of electronics and samples. The results are quite stunning, as Centuries Before Love and War, a follow-up to their self-produced debut EP, You Came Here for Sunset Last Year, proves. What hasn't changed is the Stars' glimmering, gloomy, shimmering, shambling style, but the electronics allow them to vastly expand their musical palette, add a plethora of shadings and textures to their songs, and evoke ock's rich past. That's evident on the opening track, with its scratchy vinyl kick-drum sample played off against digitized handclaps, sending the sound further and further back into the past, even as the song crescendos from stadium ock guitar leads to swirling shoegazing heights. "Movies of Antarctica" is just as breathtaking, leaping from the jangly guitars beloved of U2 to the drenched atmospheres adored by Radiohead. "With You," in contrast, is doused in post-punk gloom and simple guitar riffs that contrarily evoke Joy Division's basslines, the arrangement's sparseness counterpointed by an extravagantly lush chorus. At the other end of the spectrum comes "Arithmatik," the denseness of its sound and atmospheres swelling into a massive chorus that drips of classic ock. And it's these many contrasts -- between analog and digital, styles past and present, guitar and keyboards -- and the internal dynamics of the songs themselves that drive much of the set. "Lullabye for a G.I./Don't Close Your Eyes," for example, elegantly shifts from ambient electro into acoustic guitar passages, while stirring guitar twines around the bubbling, twittering keyboards on "Fantastic." The lyrics are just as shaded, textured, and thought-provoking as the music that accompanies it. Little within Centuries is instantly catchy, but its pop antecedents are always clear, and it's the kind of album that encourages listeners to delve back time and time again to further appreciate the beauty and intricacy of its sound.
This band was f'ing amazing live. Every song on this album is very listenable, it just chills you out, but it still rocks.
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Stars of Track And Field = Indie Rock + Electronic Pop. Centuries Before Love And War is a remarkable album that stretches quite comfortably between genres.
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Stars of Track And Field = Indie Rock + Electronic Pop. Centuries Before Love And War is a remarkable album that stretches quite comfortably between genres.
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Give this little ditty a spin. Its the sound that souls make when they have sexual intercourse.PS. I Also Grew A Goatee So I Look Something Like This...
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Well there are apparently least two: Dylan in the Movies, and Stars of Track and Field. And as a rule I generally don't give bands with names taken from songs of other bands much of a chance. But, I caught the Stars of Track and Field on the KCRW morning becomes eclectic podcast, and saw them on a DirectTV concert series and was intrigued. Now just picked up the $5.99 album on iTunes and am rea...
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This band was f'ing amazing live. Every song on this album is very listenable, it just chills you out, but it still rocks.
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| Title | Lyrics | Buy |
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| 1 Centuries |
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| 2 Movies of Antarctica |
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| 3 With You |
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| 4 Lullabye for a G.I./Don't Close Your Eyes |
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| 5 Real Time |
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| 6 Arithmatik |
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| 7 U.S. Mile 5 |
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| 8 Say Hello |
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| 9 Exit the Recital |
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| 10 Fantastic |
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