The Earlies / These Were The Earlies
Artist The Earlies
Album Title: These Were The Earlies
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Rock: Folk-Rock
Format CD
Released 09/07/2004
Reissue Date 10/24/2005
Label Secretly Canadian Records
Catalog No SC137
Bar Code No 6 56605 01372 5
Reissue Yes
Packaging Jewelcase
Tracks
1. In The Beginning (0:26)
2. One Of Us Is Dead (5:56)
3. Wayward Song (6:16)
4. Slow Man's Dream (4:49)
5. 25 Easy Pieces (4:51)
6. Morning Wonder (5:34)
7. The Devil's Country (5:50)
8. Song For #3 (4:15)
9. Lows (4:46)
10. Bring It Back Again (5:31)
11. Dead Birds (2:48)
Date Acquired 09/06/2012
Personal Rating
Acquired from Eric D. Hoover (Amazon)
Purchase Price 6.47

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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Heather Phares
A collection of the Earlies' EPs, These Were the Earlies captures the half-Texan, half-English band's spacy yet oddly sentimental sound. Their music has been compared to such genre-defining artists as the Polyphonic Spree, the Flaming Lips, and Mercury Rev, and while there are definite similarities, the Earlies find their own distinctive niche. At times they manage to be even trippier than their influences and peers, concentrating more on atmospheres and elaborate soundscapes than on full-fledged pop songs. Tracks like "Lows" and "Slow Man's Dream" are lush but low-key, and end up being sophisticated, whimsical background music (in the best sense of the term). When the band does touch down and deliver more immediate songs, they're often surprisingly vulnerable, and with far less of the bombast of the aforementioned bands. "Wayward Song" unrepentantly wears its heart on its sleeve, with Brandon Carr whispering "In this life, we love who we can, then they're gone" over gentle pianos, flutes, and bassoon. "Song for #3" is just as sweet, mixing a twinkly melody that sounds like it was lifted from '70s pop with radio static. A jammy, groove-based vibe predominates on tracks like "Morning Wonder," which blends a Krautrock rhythm with a loping spaghetti Western guitar riff, while "The Devil's Country"'s stomping beat, triumphant brass, and free jazz saxophone solos show that even the Earlies' version of rock is more than a little bent. Surprisingly cohesive for an EP collection -- and even more so when you discover that it took years of trans-Atlantic recording to make -- These Were the Earlies is also a strong debut album.
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