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Person Pitch
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Panda Bear
List Price: $13.98
Our Price: $9.31
You Save: $4.67 (33%)
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Product Details
- Artist: Panda Bear
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- Binding: Audio CD
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- EAN: 0677517101423
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- Label: Paw Tracks
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- Manufacturer: Paw Tracks
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- Number of Discs: 1
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- Product Group: Music
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- Publisher: Paw Tracks
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- Release Date: 2007-04-09
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- Studio: Paw Tracks
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- Title: Person Pitch
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- UPC: 677517101423
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: As a member of the acclaimed Animal Collective, Noah Lennox (a.k.a. Panda Bear) has for years been making music that mixes experimental structures with a pure '60s pop sensibility. On his second solo album of looped and layered experimental post-pop, he shows considerable skill in crafting songs that retain the essence of psychedelia while having been crafted with loop-based home recording methods. The album's finest moment has to be "Bros," a slowly percolating and unapologetically lovely twelve-and-a-half-minute song. Like Brian Wilson lost in a K-hole, gorgeous harmonies soaked in echo bump up against each other until they reach a rhythmic, fascinating crescendo. Elsewhere, Panda Bear's music tends toward the same effect a tad too much, often without the same transcendent quality. Person Pitch has fabulous moments aplenty, though (as with Captain Beefheart's 1968 Strictly Personal) one does wish that fewer reverb-soaked vocals were used, or that they were used even further, pushed into complete abstract dissociation. --Mike McGonigal
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Customer Reviews
tight
This cd is very tight. I really like how they play off what sounds to me like audio feedback loops, which essentially creates a new kind of music. Makes me wonder how they did it with out creating chaos
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perfect pitch
the whole thing (and in particular 'bros') sounds like it was made by some happy 8 year olds high on acid and kool aid....its totally insanely brilliant.
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apparently, i need more patience, or at least some better weed.
there are a lot of hyped up bands out there right now (2008) making this kind of record. yeasayer, caribou, animal collective, grizzly bear, just to name a few. i'm trying to think of who started this current sub-genre of indie but can't place it -- probably animal collective -- this guys other group.
it's not like the early 90's where bands like pavement, sebadoh and gbv made lo-fi records because that's the only studio or 4-track they could afford. these bands are purposefully going for a certain low-fi asthetic. it's noise, for noise sake. think the beach boys filtered through enough eq's to make everything sound tiny and trebly. i'm not saying it's not original, i'm not even saying that sometimes it actually works, cuz it does.. sometimes. but man, over the course of an entire album? it's just so boring. and then to get 10 more bands doing the exact same thing? and can they pull it off live? i dunno, i've never seen them in concert but i kind of doubt it.
if you like tinny sounding music that meanders aimlessly (and forever) without any real hooks or discernible lyrics, then this is for you. as for me, i'm still looking for bands that make music without any overtly obvious touchstones -- i.e. early r.e.m, the smiths, pavement, the pixies, early modest mouse, hell maybe even some jesus lizard? yup, still no one out there that sounds like the jesus lizard.
i'll give an extra star just cuz this guy home recorded this with some loop program which must have been a b*tch. now please go make something that doesn't sound like your other group.
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A B-side to the Lion King Soundtrack?
Nothing about this album made me say "wow". Campfire songs, Spirit they've gone, Feels, all three albums left my head reeling. And meritted multiple listens through before I could form a cohesive opinion (which ended up being possitive on all counts).
I bought this album on the strength of the animal collectives portfolio, and on the strength of amazon reviews. Really though, I wish that I had obeyed the skeptic in me.
The aboriginal chanting, vocal feedback, and programmed drums, are all very nice elements. Blended together, its pretty enchanting music. But I feel like Panda Bear could have done much better. To tell the truth, Person Pitch bored me to tears. My biggest complaint is the lack of uhm... structural dynamics? what I mean is the songs progress very little, if at all. More static than four-on-the-floor techno. I was hoping for something of an experience... what i got was a good soundtrack to a very long nap.
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This Album Was Used in a Study at Harvard
The Harvard Department of Psychology in collaboration with the Indiana University School of Education performed a study to investigate the possible relationship between measured intelligence and music appreciation. Thirty full length albums were selected that ranged from Rogers and Hammerstein to Malawian tribal healing music. Just to name a few the spectrum included representatives from the genres of country, jazz, classical, hip hop, R&B, and Heavy Metal. Of the thirty albums selected somehow Person Pitch made the list. 5000 participants from a wide range of socio-economic, ethnic, and educational backgrounds were selected at random. Male/female and age groups were equally represented. The findings concluded that there is a strong relationship (r=+.94) between measured intelligence and appreciation of specific types of musical stimulation. Though genre proved to be statistically irrelevant, individual tracks and albums were observed to have a strong correlation with various intelligence levels. Individuals grouped in intelligence levels in the upper middle-tier and above were found to have a statistically significant affinity for Person Pitch.
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