| | Be Your Own Pet CD Be Your Own Pet Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Not so much an album as a stampede of songs, Be Your Own Pet's first full-length serves up more of the bratty, chaotic garage/noise/pop that made the band's EPs a sensation in the U.K. Actually, it's not surprising that Be Your Own Pet found fans there early on; not only does the group have the garage rock sass that the U.K. has been partial to for most of the 2000s, it also possesses a cute but prickly vibe that's similar to British indie bands like This Is Teen-C Power!-era Bis and KaitO. Comparisons have also been made to the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' early, no-holds-barred sound, and while Be Your Own Pet has only a fraction of that band's arty menace and freewheeling sexuality, BYOP's frontwoman Jemina Pearl can snarl and wail just as furiously as the YYYs' Karen O. However, when Pearl squeals "We're on two wheels, baby!" on "Bicycle Bicycle, You Are My Bicycle" or insists "I'm not sorry!" on "Bog" -- a song about taking Xanax and drowning a boyfriend -- the effect is more playful than predatory. Indeed, Be Your Own Pet is full of so much manic glee that the band just can't contain itself: Pearl kicks off the album by howling "I've never had so much fun!" on "Thresher's Flail" and shouting "We wanna be friends with you!" with so much force on "Fuuuuuun" that it sounds more like a demand than a request. The pop-rocks-and-soda sugar buzz of the band's thrashy guitars and crashing drums (and of course, Pearl's vocals) is thrilling, especially on "Wildcat!" and "Girls on TV," and underneath all the noise, there are witty and surprising lyrics throughout the album -- "Love Your Shotgun" rhymes "riot" with "room at the Hyatt." However, Be Your Own Pet's breathless, breakneck overload ends up being the band's greatest strength and weakness. Their songs are wind sprints, not marathons, and listening to a full album of them can be a little exhausting. Still, there's something transcendent in their best tantrums: "October, First Account" has a charming sense of wonder; "We Will Vacation, You Can Be My Parasol" adds some more control to BYOP's onslaughts; and the "elegant rubble" of "Adventure" shows that the band can be a little more complex and thoughtful without sacrificing any of its youthful energy. Even though Be Your Own Pet were more consistent, or maybe just easier to keep up with, on their EPs, there's still plenty of hyperactive fun (or rather, fuuuuuun) to be found here. ~ Heather PharesSpin (p.82) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[Pearl] dives in like she was born with her own irresistible rock-star sneer." Alternative Press (p.188) - "Jemima Pearl Abegg, vocalist for be your own PET, is made of sass, attitude and hellfire -- just like the Nashville quart's self-titled debut." Be Your Own Pet Music Review Purchase Be Your Own Pet CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Lucinda Williams Live @ The Fillmore West CDs (2005) Digipak
Be Your Own Pet album
$15.09 Never one to tread the expected path, Lucinda Williams followed her big breakthrough album, CAR WHEELS ON A GRAVEL ROAD, with a pair of low-key records full of sad, quiet, fragile songs (interrupted by the occasional barn-burner). LIVE @ THE FILLMORE concentrates heavily on those latter two releases, unleashing all the intense, burning emotions that lay at their core, making plain the inherent frisson lurking below the surface of such ostensibly laconic tunes as "Lonely Girls" and "Righteously." Meanwhile, songs that already had plenty of bite in their studio versions are pumped up to an even more electrifying, visceral level (a bold, crunching "Changed the Locks;" the roaring, bluesy "Joy"). The debt Williams and her band owe to Neil Young & Crazy Horse is illuminated on "Are You Down," and, elsewhere, a spoken intro finds ...
| | Kagemusha DVDs (1980) Widescreen; Special Edition; Subtitled
Be Your Own Pet CD music
$31.99 In this dazzling epic from Akira Kurosawa, a petty thief named Kagemusha (Tatsuya Nakadai) gets saved from a death sentence because he resembles the warlord Shingen Takeda (also Nakadai). The warlord has been fighting two other leaders for control of 16th-century Japan and impersonators often take his place during battles to put him out of harm's way. Because of Kagemusha's strong physical similarities to the warlord, he's a perfect choice for a "shadow warrior." However, the arrangement suddenly changes when Shingen gets fatally wounded while watching a battle. Adhering to Shingen's final wish, the warlord's men keep the death a secret, and Kagemusha struggles to transform himself from a criminal into a leader.
KAGEMUSHA marked a welcome return for the legendary director, who had not made a movie since 1974. Nakadai, a supporting player in earlier Kurosawa films, expertly portrays the leading role(s), almost always filled in the past by Toshirô Mifune. KAGEMUSHA also features the final screen appearance of longtime Kurosawa actor, Takashi Shimura. In order to help the film get an international release, Francis Ford Coppola and George Lucas served as executive producers.
Director Akira Kurosawa sumptuously reconstructs the splendor of feaudal ...
| | Bloc Party Silent Alarm CD (2005)
Be Your Own Pet music CDs
$10.79 On this immensely appealing debut, SILENT ALARM, the London-based quartet Bloc Party fulfills the promise of their barnstorming 2004 singles "Banquet" and "She's Hearing Voices." Led by magnetic frontman Kele Okereke, the band extracts the most fascinating aspects of the previous 25 years of British indie rock and fuses them into a new entity--complete with smarts and heart--never delving into retro-kitsch or slavish imitation.
Okerere's urgent yelp most often recalls a fired-up incarnation of the Cure's Robert Smith, but the sounds the group creates echo everything from Gang of Four's staccato militarism ("Banquet") to the reverberating guitars of the Chameleons ("Price of Gas"). At times, Bloc Party also recalls the ecstatic soundwashes of early-1990s cult pioneers like Ride ("Plans") and Slowdive ("Compliments"). Lyrically, Okerere tilts toward an endearing adolescent pessimism that, even when the music is less than mopey, gives him away as a goth at heart ("and the ravens are leaving the tower/make your peace"). However, at the end of "Price of Gas," when he proclaims "I can tell you how this ends/We're going to win this," one can hope that Okerere is expressing his confidence in a bright future for his extremely talented band.
Although most remix albums offer little more than vaguely tweaked novelty, Bloc Party's SILENT ALARM REMIXED transcends that trend with a stunningly diverse set of reworked tracks from the British group's much-lauded debut. Given ...
| | Satantango DVDs (1994) Widescreen; Black & White; Subtitled
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$53.35 This ambitious, black-and-white, seven-hour Hungarian film from idiosyncratic auteur Bela Tarr follows the inhabitants of a run-down Hungarian village still reeling from the collapse of Communism. Based on Laszlo Karsznahorkai's novel and filmed over a period of two years, the critically acclaimed epic takes the time to explore each character's ...
| | Maya Beiser Almost Human CD (2007)
Be Your Own Pet album
$14.65
| | Alexandra DVD (2007)
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$21.49 Russian master Aleksandr Sokurov (THE SUN, RUSSIAN ARK, MOTHER AND SON) has produced another majestic achievement with ALEXANDRA. In a rare instance of working from his own original script, Sokurov tells the simple tale of a woman in the twilight of her life who embarks on a special journey. As the story unfolds, Sokurov's deeper purpose is revealed, resulting in a work that speaks profoundly about the corrosive nature of war. Opera star Galina Vishnevskaya is Alexandra. She hasn't seen her grandson in seven years and, understanding that her life is coming to an end, she decides to visit him at his army camp in war-torn Chechnya. What at first is a beautiful reunion gradually becomes conflicted, as Alexandra is forced to accept the painful realization ...
| | Roy Rogers Tumbling Tumbleweeds CD (1987)
Be Your Own Pet music CDs
$4.49
| | Voluptuous Horror Of Karen Blac Anti-Naturalists CD (1995)
Be Your Own Pet songs
$11.79
| | Jerry Joseph Cherry CD (2004)
Be Your Own Pet album
$11.15 Live Recording
| | Sophie Zelmani CD (2008) (Import)
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$11.79
| | Gold, Jim & Gallery Nice To Be With You 2 On 1 CD (2007)
Be Your Own Pet music CDs
$24.45 Track Listing of songs: There's An Island; Louisiana Line; ...
| | Best Of Acoustic Guitar CD (2007)
Be Your Own Pet songs
$5.95
| | Jars Of Clay Essential CDs (2007)
Be Your Own Pet album
$14.89 This installment in Sony's excellent ESSENTIAL compilation series draws from the 1995 to 2007 recordings of the popular Christian alternative-rock act Jars of Clay. Led by amiable frontman Dan Haseltine, the Illinois-based quartet managed to achieve crossover pop success in the mid-'90s--particularly with the urgent, folk-tinged "Flood"--a feat uncommon at the time. Along with that track, other highlights of this well-selected two-disc set include the soaring "God Will Lift Up Your Head" and the New Wave-tinged "Dead Man (Carry Me)," songs that showcase both the group's versatility and knack for casting spiritual themes in catchy pop/rock arrangements. As a band overview, THE ESSENTIAL JARS OF CLAY eclipses the previously issued FURTHERMORE, and makes for an ideal introduction to the revered CCM ensemble.
Jars of Clay: Matt Odmark, Stephen Mason (vocals, various instruments, guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, 12-string guitar, mandolin, hand claps, percussion, programming, background vocals); Charlie Lowell (vocals, various instruments, dulcimer, accordion, piano, organ, Hammond b-3 organ, keyboards, hand claps, percussion, background vocals); Dan Haseltine (vocals, various instruments, Moog synthesizer, drums, percussion, programming, loops).
Additional personnel: Mancy Alan Kane (vocals, background vocals); Laura Taylor, Leigh Nash, Andy Osenga (vocals); Scott "Sav" Savage (spoken vocals, snare drum, congas, rainsticks, shaker); David Hoffner (hammer dulcimer); ...
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