| | MGMT Electric Feel CD Single - Import MGMT Discography of CDs
UK two track CD pressing of the second single lifted from their 2008 debut album Oracular Spectacular. 'Electric Feel' is the cool, sharp, vivid pop song, razor-sharp and already a live favorite and bold album highlight. It strikes up and flies through the '70s and '80s, before becoming the sound of MGMT right now. Columbia. MGMT Electric Feel Songs | 1. | Electric Feel - (Video Mix) | |
| 2. | Electric Feel - (Justice Remix) | |
| Electric Feel Review
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Purchase Electric Feel CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Regina Spektor Far CD (2009)
Electric Feel album
$13.69 Regina Spektor worked with no less than four big-name producers on FAR, all of them with very different backgrounds: David Kahne was her collaborator on 2006's BEGIN TO HOPE; Garret "Jacknife" Lee counts R.E.M. and U2 among his credits; Jeff Lynne's lavish sound is famous on ELO's albums; and Mike Elizondo has worked with Fiona Apple and Maroon 5. It's something of a surprise, then, that FAR sounds so homogenized. On SOVIET KITSCH and BEGIN TO HOPE, Spektor's wide-eyed moments were balanced with darker, knowing songs that kept her music grounded. Here, almost all of the rough or unpredictable edges have been smoothed away, and all that's left is Spektor's sweet, quirky side.
At times, FAR gets close to being too precious, whether it's putting Spektor's name in all lowercase letters in the liner notes, her dolphin on the otherwise charming "Folding Chair," or lyrics like "We made our own computer out of macaroni pieces" on the chirpy opener, "The Calculation." Even the album's darker tracks, such as the percussion-heavy "Machine," are surprisingly sugary compared to her previous work. However, Spektor's guileless voice and delivery allow her to get away with sounds and ideas that would be cloying in the hands of almost any other artist. She manages to make a song with the chorus "Eet, eet, eet" catchy and affecting, and fashions an observant and witty story ...
| | Green Day Dookie CD (1994)
Electric Feel CD music
$8.65 In the days before there was grunge or thrash, a movement called punk arose as a populist response to the conformity of corporate rock, and a return to the garage roots of the music. Punk, new wave...whatever you want to call it, the movement was quickly co-opted by the major labels and radio as the best bands quickly evaporated into the pop mainstream while the rest faded into obscurity or day jobs.
"I'm not growing up, I'm just burning out, and I stepped in line to walk amongst the dead," singer-guitarist Billy Joe screams on the opening "Burnout," enunciating a timely slacker sentiment over a decidedly punk trio track, roaring through your speakers like a freight train powered by old Ramones and Clash records. One can hear the complaints of DOOKIE articulated in a thousand smoke-filled bedrooms throughout America. On "Longview," tongue not so firmly implanted in cheek, they extend their view of slacker apathy to apply to the fading joys of masturbation, but quickly answer their own ennui with the real world complaints of "Welcome To Paradise," begging the question, is there anything out there?
On a song like "She," Green Day seemingly answers all the questions of apathy with a furious groove and lyrics that urge listeners "locked up in a world that's been planned for you" to "smash the silence with the brick of self-control." And with "Sassafrass Roots" Green Day ups the slacker ante dealt up by Beck on "Loser" by asking, "So why are you alone wasting your time, when you could be with me wasting your time...may I waste your time, too?" The humor and furious musicianship Green Day display ...
| | Kid Rock Devil Without A Cause CD (1998)
Electric Feel music CDs
$10.75 In the grand tradition of Faith No More, Red Hot Chili Peppers, etc. genre-hopper Kid Rock chooses to lay down his raps over a bed of rock-oriented electric guitar riffs instead of traditional hip-hop tracks and beats. Unlike the aforementioned groups though, Kid Rock comes off more like an adventurous hip-hopper than a rocker with a Public Enemy jones. In an effort to prove himself as "street" as his more conventional rap peers, ...
| | My Morning Jacket Evil Urges CD (2008)
Electric Feel songs
$10.89 While My Morning Jacket began experimenting outside of its signature alt-country/classic-rock sound on 2005's Z, little could have prepared fans for the stylistic shifts apparent on EVIL URGES. Frontman Jim James channels Prince on the slinky opening title track, and the album branches out in a number of directions from there, with prog-rock angularity ("Touch Me I'm Going to Scream Part 1") and breezy `70s pop ("Sec Walkin'") all added to the mix. On EVIL's biggest curveball, the unabashedly silly "Highly Suspicious," the Kentucky-based group seems to have wandered in Ween territory (not a huge stretch since both acts are neo-jam bands), with ...
| | Death Cab For Cutie Open Door CD (2009) Extended Play
Electric Feel album
$4.99 Death Cab followed their first number one Billboard album, NARROW STAIRS, with this EP featuring five outtakes from those sessions. Judged at the time by the band to be out of step with the mood of the rest of NARROW STAIRS, the songs feature the band's lean and mean indie pop and Ben Gibbard's dense but always hummable narratives. Balancing regretful musings like "all my friends are forward thinking/getting hitched and quitting drinking" from the stand-out "I Was Once A Loyal Lover" with his trademark wryly odd ...
| | Devendra Banhart What Will We Be CD (2009) Limited Edition
Electric Feel CD music
$15.65 Setting aside the grand orchestrations of SMOKEY ROLLS DOWN THUNDER CANYON, Devendra Banhart's WHAT WILL WE BE is everything its predecessor was not: straightforward, cleanly produced, consistently laid-back (to nearly Jack Johnson proportions), and free of ambition. Banhart enlists the same band as last time (Noah Georgeson, Greg Rogove, Luckey Remington, and Rodrigo Amarante), but hired production whiz Paul Butler, whose records with A Band of Bees are some of the most striking productions of the 2000s. The double-tracked vocals give the album the same air as Banhart's early four-track experiments, but there's no haunted quality, just an occasional hippie-dippie aside in his delivery. Recorded in Northern California, WHAT WILL WE BE often has the same slacker sensibilities and scent of ocean breeze that Jack Johnson has made his name with (read: funky white-bread basslines and closely ...
| | Billy Bragg Take Down The Union Jack (2008)
Electric Feel music CDs
$10.99
| | Feeder Tumble & Fall PT.2 (2005) (Import) United Kingdom
Electric Feel songs
$7.89
| | Looking Glass 2 EP (2008) (Import)
Electric Feel album
$14.85
| | Pushim Rainbow (2008) (Import)
Electric Feel CD music
$19.69
| | Yuki Nishio Tsugaru Hana Ichimonme/Yushima Koi M (2008) (Import)
$15.75 | | Nayuta Vol. 3-Candy Boy (2008) (Import)
$23.65 |
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