2011-02-21
Bright Eyes is the brainchild of Conor Oberst, who along with Mike Mogis and Nathaniel Walcott, are the central members of the band. It's the seventh go-round for this ensemble, despite Oberst's regular threats to "kill off" this band. "The People's Key" is a quasi-concept album, with Oberst seeking ultimate meaning in the outer reaches of the universe, Rastafarianism, various philosophies and a smattering of other questings. While that all might sound off-putting, anyone who knows a Bright Eyes record will tell you that somehow, he makes this all listenable and (mostly) interesting -- both as a whole and within the individual songs. The opener, "Firewall," begins with the rambling musings of an extra-terrestrial believer for the first two minutes and then segues into the song itself. "Jejune Stars," "Haile Selaisse," "Triple Spiral" and "Beginner's Mind" are the most up-tempo of the bunch, but every song delves into the Big Questions and the closer, "One for You, One for Me" is a fitting musical ending (and the very end brings back the guy in the opening number to chat away to the fade). It's all worth the trip. 02/11 MJVD R-Indie [FCC note on cut #2 -- "piss and vinegar"]PROSSER
Prosser
OF MONTREAL
Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?
COLDPLAY
Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends
k.d. lang
Hymns of the 49th Parallel
Lily Allen
It's Not Me, It's You
ARI HEST
The Break In
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