| | Magic Numbers CD Magic Numbers Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Magic Numbers: Romeo Stodart (vocals, guitars); Angela Gannon (vocals, melodica, glockenspiel); Michele Stodart (vocals, bass instrument); Sean Gannon (drums). Every three years or so, the British music press touts another band as the Next Big Thing, or at least the antidote to the trend the press kick-started a couple years back. Some of these bands -- whether they're Suede, the Strokes, or Franz Ferdinand -- are quite good, even excellent, and sometimes they're merely average; it all depends on what trend the band's supposed to bring to end and what fad they're supposed to kick-start, since the quality of the music almost always takes a back seat to the demands of fashion. This kind of hyped-up transience is one of the great things about pop music -- not only is it supposed to exist in the moment, sometimes great pop music only sounds great within its given moment, whether it's Whigfield or Crazy Frog -- but that doesn't mean that the trends are always fun, and one of the more inexplicable British-driven fads of the 2000s is the Magic Numbers, whose eponymous debut album was hailed as an instant classic in many quarters upon its early-summer release in the U.K. in 2005. Comprised of two sets of brothers and sisters, the quartet sings soft, gentle sunshine pop with vaguely rootsy underpinnings. Because of this slightly folky bent and clear reverence for '60s pop, they were positioned as the return of the real as compared to the new wave of new wave, which encompassed anyone from Interpol to Franz, and even the neo-garage rock revival of the beginning of the decade -- after all, by the summer of 2005, it was clear that the White Stripes were too arty and obstinate to qualify as a roots band. While The Magic Numbers is as dippy as any number of harmony-laden folk-rock groups that arrived in the wake of the Mamas & the Papas, their cutsey navel-gazing is most decidedly a product of its time. So are the simpering schoolboy vocals of lead singer Romeo Stodart, whose thin, squeaky earnest mewling makes Coldplay's Chris Martin sound macho and distracts from whatever pleasures that can be gleaned from the harmonies of his sister Michele and their colleague Angela Gannon. Romeo Stodart's voice and his mopey lovelorn lyrics are clear outgrowths of late-'90s indie pop, picking up on the tweeness of Belle & Sebastian but discarding their clever literary bent, not to mention their songcraft, in favor of simple-minded confessionals spiked by the occasional naughty word ("I'm a no-good used-up bruised-up f*cked-up boy," he unconvincingly croons), alternating between singalong happy tunes and slow, sleepy crawls. It's all pleasant enough on the surface and since it self-consciously recalls classic rock -- not only in sound but in titles that recall songs of the past ("Wheel's on Fire" is a riff on Bob Dylan & the Band's "This Wheel's on Fire," "Hymn for Her" is close to the Pretenders' "Hymn to Her" and it also shares a name with an Ides of March song, but that's probably not a deliberate move) -- some listeners will be inclined to give them a pass, since it's kind of familiar in feel while sounding different than a lot of guitar-based rock and pop in 2005. Yet if The Magic Numbers is judged against the standards of second-tier '60s folk-pop -- forget the Beatles and Beach Boys or even the Mamas & the Papas or Donovan or Lovin' Spoonful, but against legions of soundalikes like Rose Garden -- the group's music is not as well written or melodic or as interesting, nor does it hold up well to late-'90s indie pop from Belle & Sebastian to Elliott Smith, and it lacks the conviction of freak folk, since their aw-shucks, lovey-dovey pose feels contrived. Nevetheless, the quartet is much easier to listen to than Devendra Banhart -- sunny tunes and smooth surfaces do indeed help -- and they have a certain veneer of mature, classy respectability that means this can appeal to everyone from baby boomers to echo boomers. It all glides by easily eRolling Stone (No. 984, p.148) - 3.5 stars out of 5 - "...[B]lending rainy-day folk, shambling indie rock and heartbreak harmonies into a dog-eared pop record your mother could love...." Spin (p.135) - "[Their] close harmonizing meticulously shades in their occasionally bouncy, mildly bummed, curiously charming pop." Entertainment Weekly (No. 845, p.77) - "...[C]heery, zippy exuberance that is rare these days." - Grade: B+ Mojo (Publisher) (p.58) - Ranked #7 in Mojo's "The 50 Best Albums Of 2005" - "[I]nfectious melodies and keen vocal harmonies held sway..." Magic Numbers Music Review Purchase Magic Numbers CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Neil Young On The Beach CD (1974) Remastered
Magic Numbers
$8.99 Guests:Graham Nash/Rick Danko/ David Crosby/Levon Helm
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Personnel: Neil Young (vocals, guitar, banjo, harmonica, Wurlitzer organ); Neil Young (Wurlitzer piano); Ben Keith (vocals, guitar, slide guitar, ...
| | Lucinda Williams Live @ The Fillmore West CDs (2005) Digipak
Magic Numbers
$14.89 Personnel: Lucinda Williams (vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Lucinda Williams; Doug Pettibone (guitar, lap steel guitar, pedal steel guitar, mandolin, harmonica, background vocals); Jim Christie (keyboards, drums, percussion); Taras Prodaniuk (bass guitar, background vocals). Audio Mixer: Michael Dumas. Recording information: The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA (11/20/2003/11/22/2003). Lucinda ...
| | Brian Wilson Smile CD (2004)
Magic Numbers
$16.19 Long Awaited Rel.Of Follow-Up To "Pet Sounds" Album.
Personnel: Brian Wilson (vocals, keyboards); Brian Wilson ; Probyn Gregory (vocals, whistling, ...
| | Eels Blinking Lights And Other Revelations CDs (2005) Digipak
Magic Numbers
$13.89 Eels: Mark Oliver Everett. Additional personnel: Chet, John Sebastian , Peter Buck, Tom Waits, Koool G Murder, Puddin', Butch. On 2003's Shootenanny!, Eels frontman and songwriter Mark Oliver Everett seemed to approach his work with fresh ears. He cut through his own trademark lyric and production excesses (very evident on the wonderfully messy and rocked-up Souljacker) ...
| | Arctic Monkeys Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not CD (2006)
Magic Numbers
$11.59 Arctic Monkeys: Alex Turner (vocals, guitar); Jamie Cook (guitar); Andy Nicholson (bass guitar); Matt Helders (drums). Audio Mixer: Jim Abbiss. Recording information: 2 Fly Studio, Sheffield, England; ...
| | Flower Kings Back In The World Of Adventures CD (1995)
Magic Numbers
$14.55
| | Mott The Hoople Two Miles From Heaven: New & Rare Tracks 1969-72 CD (1980) (Import) Bonus Tracks; United Kingdom
Magic Numbers
$16.19 2003 remastered reissue of 1980 album features 17 tracks including 2 bonus tracks, 'The Debt' & 'Downtown', plus a comprehensive 16 page booklet. Angel Air.
Mott The Hoople: Ian Hunter (vocals, piano); Mick Ralphs (vocals, guitar); Verden Allen (organ, percussion, background vocals); Overend Watts (bass, background vocals); Dale Griffin (drums). Personnel: Ian Hunter (vocals, guitar, piano); Mick Ralphs, Ariel Bender (vocals, guitar); Morgan Fisher (vocals, piano, synthesizer); Dale Buffin Griffin (vocals, drums); Pete Watts, Stan Tippins, Verden Allen (vocals). Photographers: Dale Buffin Griffin; Mick Ralphs. Taking its name from the first ever visit to the Mott The Hoople archives, the early 1980s' Two Miles From Heaven out-takes collection, Two Miles From Live Heaven adheres to the same high standards as its predecessor with the unearthing, at last, of one of the best known (and most sought-after) of all Mott documents, the 1974 Santa Monica Civic show. Originally recorded and broadcast by the King Biscuit Flour Hour, the show has sustained some of Mott's most cherished bootlegs, including the legendary Behind Enemy Lines. Since then, odd tracks have filtered out on various official collections, but Two Miles From Live Heaven marks the first ever appearance of the entire show, and it was well worth the wait. Opening with Ian Hunter's a cappella drawl through the first verse of "American Pie", it then crashes into a phenomenal "Golden Age Of Rock'n'Roll", before charging on through a set that doesn't put one foot wrong in its portrayal of the Ariel Bender-era band at its peak. From obscure b-sides ("Rest In Peace") to even more obscure solo shots (Bender's own "Here Comes The Queen", from his Under Open Skies album), from key album tracks to monster hit singles, and all wrapping up with a fabulous ...
| | Tone Rec Demo Pack Demoli CD (1999) Import
Magic Numbers
$8.89
| | Justin Rutledge No Never Alone CD (2004)
Magic Numbers
$12.49
| | Montana In Amsterdam CD (2007)
Magic Numbers
$17.09
| | Mad About Bluegrass CDs (2009) (Import) Import; Boxed Set
Magic Numbers
$23.65
|
|
|