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Yellow House
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Grizzly Bear
List Price: $14.99
Our Price: $9.69
You Save: $5.30 (35%)
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Product Details
- Artist: Grizzly Bear
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- Binding: Audio CD
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- EAN: 0801061014728
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- Label: Warp Records
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- Manufacturer: Warp Records
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- Number of Discs: 1
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- Product Group: Music
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- Publisher: Warp Records
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- Release Date: 2006-09-05
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- Studio: Warp Records
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- Title: Yellow House
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- UPC: 801061014728
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: It's a rare thing to find a band that counts the glockenspiel, autoharp, banjo, and flute as key instruments, especially when it's a rock band with just four members. Grizzly Bear use all the above instruments plus another dozen or so to make the 10 floating, gossamer, low-lit tunes that comprise Yellow House. They are rounded edges, off-kilter waltzes ("Lullabye," which teeters tipsily), laconic vignettes, and even a vintage 1930s waltz written by singer Edward Droste's great-aunt. The meshwork here is Grizzly Bear's smarts, a banjo lending fleeting rhythmic hints to a guitar-picked melody ("Reprise"), a haunted piano filling the sonic air with smoke. All four members sing duskily and softly, making a slow-going atmosphere that would delight the great composer Morton Feldman. The brilliance here is that every song mesmerizes, not with aural dominance but with an atmospheric magnetism. --Andrew Bartlett
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Customer Reviews
Grandmothers House
The majority of this album (with the exception of 3 songs) has that nostalgic feel to it, almost as if you were taken back to the past to a better time, when visiting your relatives and cousins was something to really get excited about, when everyone was around, and everyone was in good health and in the best of spirits. When your mindset was totally free of negativity. When the only thing on your mind was going outside to play, all day until sunset.
What i feel when listening to this cannot really be described though, it's just one of those albums you feel on a deeply personal level. The opening piano of "Easier" sounds like something you would hear off of a really old record, and it being danced to by some old people.
"On a Neck On a Spit", what an intro, guitars seamlessly blend into one other creating an opening of epic proportions. The song goes on a journey down memory lane with some very nice guitar work and building into psychedelic folk freak out which in my mind can really only be compared to a slightly toned down version of animal collective. He's not violently shreaking, but his voice progressively gets louder. 5/5
"Lullabye" is a lullabye at first, but then develops into an amazing jam complete with so many wailing instruments it will make your head spin. In the midst of the madness: "chin up, cheer up, chin up, cheer up, chin up over and over until you are convinced that the best thing is to keep your head up through it all "my loves another kind" he says as the song closes out. Incredible song. 5/5
"Knife" has a dab of Beach Boys. such a smooth, laid back little ditty. the type of song you'd want to play at night speeding down a country road with the windows down. A clear your mind type of tune. 5/5
when i hear "Little Brother" i am reminded of Elliott Smith guitar, very dynamic, methodical type of playing. Beautiful ending with some birds chirping in the background 4.5/5
"Marla" starts out really creepy and haunting, and engulfed in darkness. It breaks through and sees the light at about the 1:53 mark, turns creepy again for awhile. A slower song, with some weird "yelps" in the background, almost as if you were stuck in a dark winter forest and you heard wolves in the distance.
"Reprise" wields a banjo, and echoes the sentiments of lullabye with "my loves another kind" some nice work here.
"Colorado" perhaps the best out of the bunch, reminds me of being on a snow capped mountain, or in the wilderness. the song starts to reach a climax, where everything blends together perfectly and the question is asked, "what now?" Almost as if he is removed completely from everything and doesn't know what to do. Such a beautiful tragedy, lol sounds like an emo band, but it's anything but. 6/5
With the exception of two or 3 songs, this album is perfect. It's such a diverse collection of sounds and it takes awhile for it's beauty and charm to sink in. Colorado will hit immediately, some of the rest might take some time. I listen to the songs almost daily, because they each have so much to offer in terms of instruments and sound to fill your mind. It's great to fall asleep to, to reflect on, to cheer you up, or to jam out to. i'll give it 5 stars just because the highs outweigh the lows by a lot.
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Biased Review
Grizzly Bear may sound like the name of a band that should have heavy parts and a mean sound, but maybe instead the name just matches the powerful vibes and feelings that they can only give. They are respected by the modern musicians of our time because they have created their own unique sound while still using influences that are so familiar. Each song on "Yellow House" is a beautiful little masterpiece....I couldn't say one bad or negative thing about any sound on this album. I think one of my favorite things on this album is the higher "Beach Boys" type harmonies that the drummer pulls off. I think this will be my favorite band for good remainder of my life..
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"What Now?"
Grizzly Bear might sound like the name of a metal band, but they're really folksy acoustic indie rock. If you ever watch Adult Swim, you'd probably recognize a few moments from some of their commercials, and that's sometimes a decent encapsulation of their sound - catchy songs that are friendly but often with a slightly strange atmosphere. They can sound very simple and at the same time have complex arrangements, with normal rock instruments, traditional sounds like flutes, and electronic additions. It's a little hard to describe what's appealing about Yellow House, but whatever it is, it's there.
"Easier" starts with some simple atmospherics, adds some piano, and then works its way into a plucked guitar melody and high pitched vocalization accompanying. Drums and other elements are thrown on top, and the sound rounds out into a fully developed, well-chosen first track. Subsequent songs develop in a similar fashion, all sounding cohesive and yet having enough of their own flavor to sustain themselves without ever dragging. There's often a lot of shifts in tempo and sound within single tracks, and the surplus of ideas is quite evident. The closer, "Colorado" lurches into the distance with a resonating, slow drum beat and piano part which segue into and a collection of different instruments and styles with a simple, repeated melancholy chorus of "What now?" Hopefully, the creation of another solid album.
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Too Dreary
I agree with the Amazon review that they have created an atmospheric album - it's just that the atmosphere is a bit too gloomy and all the songs sound kind of the same. I live in a place with a pretty dreary climate - maybe I just need something a little sunnier.
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Deserving the 5 stars
Most of the reviews for this record are right on. GB have an incredibly haunting, big sound, full of menace and beauty. These guys clearly aren't trying to recreate anything else. One of the most stunning releases by any band in a long, long time.
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