Product Details
If Children

If Children
Wye Oak

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Product Description

The duo of Jenn Wasner and Andy Stack present an exuberant and assured debut seamlessly combining elements of noise, folk, and shoegaze to create a style all their own. Look for them at SXSW.

Track Listing

  1. Please Concrete
  2. Warning
  3. Regret
  4. Archaic Smile
  5. Family Glue
  6. Orchard Fair
  7. I Don't Feel Young
  8. Keeping Company
  9. A Lawn To Mow
  10. If Children Were Wishes
  11. Obituary

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #118348 in Music
  • Brand: Dig
  • Released on: 2008-04-08
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .14 pounds

Customer Reviews

Music from an alternate universe?3
If Children is a peculiar album. I had not heard the music of Wye Oak before this, and after listening to the album several times, I still have a difficult time wrapping my head around these songs. The first striking thing about Wye Oak are the vocals of Jenn Wasner-she could be the long lost Deal triplet sister. Her voice bears an uncanny resemblance to those of Kim and Kelly Deal of the Breeders. Please Concrete, the album opener, even sounds like it could be an outtake from Mountain Battles or Pod, bursting into a noisy guitar-squall of a solo out of the blue a couple minutes in. Warning, the second song, is easily the album highlight. Filled with feedback and propulsive rhythms, it recalls Yo La Tengo at their shoegazier moments. Archaic Smile is haunting and eerie. Family glue, like many songs on the album, maintains a sense of melancholy throughout. The song starts of like a breezy autumnal tune, then when the violin comes in, it veers off into an unsettling place. Orchard Fair is a nice, gently rocking tune that sound quite like Viva Voce or Earlimart. On Keeping Company, the falsetto vocals and piano accompaniment create at an atmosphere of a fever dream. Not quite psychedelic, not truly surreal, but unsettling-there is a sense of foreboding, it's familiar yet unknown. From here, the last few songs on the album start to drag the whole album down a bit from here, each is extremely somber. It's almost like the band has pasted two very different ep's together to create an album. All in all, a strange album-not easy to dismiss, yet difficult to understand. I think it's an album that certainly could appeal to a small audience that will cherish it as something unique and special. Certainly fans of Viva Voce, Yo La Tengo, the Breeders, Earlimart should check it out.