Friend
|
| Price: | $9.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
47 new or used available from $4.65
Average customer review:Track Listing
- Alligator [Choir Version]
- He Hit Me
- Little Brother [Electric]
- Shift [Alternate Version]
- Plans [Terrible vs. Nonhorse: Sounds Edit]
- Granny Diner
- Knife - CSS
- Plans - Band of Horses
- Knife - Atlas Sound
- Deep Blue Sea [Daniel Rossen Home Recording]
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #51687 in Music
- Released on: 2007-11-06
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: EP
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
It's fitting that Grizzly Bear has titled their 10-song EP Friend, as the thing sounds like it was recorded specifically for the band's buddies. We have alternate versions of songs from their previous LP Yellow House, some of their indie-rock friends covering their own songs, and a home demo version of one song. That said, if you are the type to buy a record for just one song, the group's wonderfully produced cover of the controversial, spooky, and brilliant Phil Spector/Carole King 1962 number "He Hit Me (And it Felt Like a Kiss)" is certainly worth it. The rest is not bad by any means, and Grizzly Bear does its best to create radically different versions of older songs. In particular, the "choir" version of "Alligator" has the thing sounding like Low, the Grateful Dead, and Sonic Youth all at once--and in a good way. The only real drawback of Friend that it whets the appetite for a more substantial offering of all-new material from these talented, Brooklyn-based folkie experimentalists. --Mike McGonigal
Customer Reviews
More than a friend
Fuzz-rockers Grizzly Bear know how to keep people's attention until their next album -- in this case, putting out an album's worth of odds and ends.
And "Friend EP" is no more or less than that -- a jumble of covers (both theirs and other people's), alternate versions, and even a demo. It has one dud track, but the rest are pretty much mellow, arty little gems, sometimes rendered into something almost unrecognizable.
One of the biggest things here is the alternate versions of their songs -- it starts with the rippling, dreamlike, almost celestial version of "Alligator," as well as an electric-edged "Little Brother" and smoothly flowing "Shift." The final song is a lo-fi, home-recorded rendition of "Deep Blue Sea," which relies heavily on strummed acoustic guitar and faint whistling.
The only sour note is the Terrible vs. Nonhorse: Sounds Edit remix of "Plans," which is basically a big squiggle of psychotic flute, clatters, blown fuses, doorbells, and what sounds like a banjo dissolving.
Grizzly Bear also turn out a spooky, weirdly wistful cover of Carole King's "He Hit Me (And It Felt Like A Kiss)". Additionally they also toss out a little demo called "Granny Diner," an ambient cluster of fuzz, meandering guitar, with a few ripples of soft organ and mournful vocals near the end. Not a bad song, but you can hear why it didn't make the cut.
And finally, there's a trio of bands covering Grizzly Bear's songs -- Band of Horses, CSS, and Atlas Sound. CSS rework "Plans" into a tight electronic squiggly dancefest, while Band of Horses go in the opposite direction, turning the same song into a music-hall country tune. And Atlas Sound turns "Knife" into a beautiful, hypnotically ambient pop tune.
"Friend" is not an EP in the sense of being short, but in the sense of not really being an album -- Grizzly Bear crammed plenty of material on here, and while it doesn't give quite the satisfied feeling of "Yellow House" or "Horn of Plenty," it's made up of individual songs that are, mostly, brilliant reminders of why we love them.
Their songs have the usual components of their music -- ringing guitar, flickering organ, subtle drums, bass, some synth, often buried under a layer of shifting fuzz. Even the angular edges of "Little Brother" doesn't disrupt their signature sound, and the smooth vocals all four contribute adds to their mournful, slightly dreamlike ambience.
In fact, they only really have problems in the aforementioned "Plans" remix, and the long stretch of verrrrrrryyyy sloooowwwwww buildup in "Granny Diner" before getting to the brilliant final two minutes. And the other bands do a good job adding their distintive sounds to Grizzly Bear too -- folky banjo, rapid techno, and a darker dreamy pop sound.
"Friend" is basically a collection of odds and ends, cobbled from Grizzly Bear and their pals. And until they come out with another album, it'll have to tide me over.
Start With Yellow House....
Thank goodness I can't categorize Grizzly Bear's music. When you listen to them, you are transported to a really weird, yet completely cohesive and sonic place. I advise starting at Yellow House and then moving on to this compilation which includes alt. versions of a few of their "hits". CSSs' version of "Knife" is priceless. The harmonies are gorgeous and dissonant on this disc. "He Hit me (and it felt like a kiss)" is truly a chestnut and it is well worth purchasing this disc for that track alone.
An ever growing, amazing band...
even on a sort of stop gap, odds and sodds release, this bands kicks out the best stuff out there. Constantly reinventing themselves, innovative and fresh, these guys remain one of my favorite bands still making music today. I'm particularly excited that they seem to have started recording tracks that sound a bit closer to their live sound, which encapsulates a lot more "rock" and doesn't dwell as much on the "folk". Something about their songs have infinite playability for me. Yellow House remains a CD I play as much as I did when I first got it.
The covers on here by other bands are fun, and ultimately just an added bonus for the bargain basement price of this "ep".
Highly recommend just about anything this band does, this EP is no exception




