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    Dear Science,
    Dear Science,

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    Artist: Tv On The Radio
    Label: DGC/Interscope
    Category: Music

    List Price: $13.98
    Buy New: $7.94
    You Save: $6.04 (43%)



    New (39) Used (11) from $7.94

    Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
    Sales Rank: 220

    Media: Audio CD
    Discs: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
    Dimensions (in): 5.5 x 4.8 x 0.2

    MPN: 001188202
    UPC: 602517823839
    EAN: 0602517823839
    ASIN: B001EOQTSI

    Release Date: September 23, 2008
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
    Condition: *FACTORY SEALED!!! FAST SHIPPING!!///

    Tracks:

      • Halfway Home
      • Crying
      • Dancing Choose
      • Stork and Owl
      • Golden Age
      • Family Tree
      • Red Dress
      • Love Dog
      • Shout Me Out
      • DLZ
      • Lover's Day

    Similar Items:

      • Only by the Night
      • Fleet Foxes
      • Acid Tongue
      • Modern Guilt
      • Little Honey

    Editorial Reviews:

    Album Description
    Dear Science,

    Tunde Adebimpe-Vocals Kyp Malone- Vocals, Guitars, Bass, Synths David Andrew Sitek-Programming, Guitars, Samples, Bass, Synths Gerard A Smith- Bass, Organ, Synths, Samples, Rhodes Jaleel Bunton-Drums, Guitars, Rhodes, Organ, Synths, Bass, Programming

    "A lot of bands have something to say," explains TV On The Radio producer/multi-instrumentalist David Sitek. "We have something to ask."

    Indeed. Good luck finding easy answers in TVOTR's ever-evolving soundscapes, though, whether we're talking about their new disc, Dear Science (DGC/Interscope) or the band's early days. When guitarist/vocalist Kyp Malone joined, he didn't even get what Sitek and vocalist Tunde Adebimpe were going for on their self-released 2002 debut, OK Calculator.

    "Aspects of OK Calculator are genius," says Malone, "but it isn't as laser-focused as Young Liars." Neither were Adebimpe and Sitek's early live sets, boundless and brash bits of performance art that Malone remembers as "an open mic/karaoke night gone awry. I could hear songs peeking through it all but it wasn't really my thing."

    Boy did that change in 2003, as Young Liars became Malone's favorite CD-R (he'd often play it for the latte sippers at a local coffee shop) and the group's first Touch & Go release. An immediate favorite among critics, the EP nailed Sitek's goal of sounding like a "grand four-track thing," from the epic, evocative balladry of "Blind" to the spectral pop trails of "Staring At the Sun." To make things even more interesting, Malone dropped his skepticism and joined the group full-time before Young Liars' official release, with drummer Jaleel Bunton and bassist Gerard Smith rounding out the band's rhythm section soon after.

    "We had a gig in Iceland where we needed a full band so we asked the two best guitar players we knew, Gerard and Jaleel, to play drums and bass," explains Sitek, laughing. "It's absurd that Kyp and I are even holding a guitar when Jaleel and Gerard are f**king bananas at playing it."

    While that may be true, TV On The Radio's loose approach to songwriting, recording and performing leaves an incredible amount of room for instrument-swapping and role reversals. Rather than rely on a stringent and stale guitars/bass/drums/vocals setup, the quintet often brings home-demoed sketches to the studio along with the attitude that a track needs to go through everyone's filter before it becomes a fully formed song.

    "Music is the most flexible medium in the world for me," explains Sitek, the beat conductor responsible for distilling the band's tracks down to a living, breathing composition that's never cloying or cumbersome. "There is no shortage of ideas; the hard part is not following each whim."

    As much as he tries to keep a record sounding lean, Sitek is quick to admit, "It takes most bands an album to get to a high track count. I can go from 4 to 96 in a day, without question. I'm track hungry, really. A lot of stuff isn't even an instrument."

    The densest a TVOTR disc ever got was their third LP, 2006's Return to Cookie Mountain, a collection of songs you need to scale with hi-def headphones to truly appreciate. Sitek went a little lighter on the multi-tracking with this Dear Science, but not by much. The album's opener, "Halfway Home," is vintage TVOTR, for instance--a rich, speaker-swallowing canvas of careening beats, buzzing riffs (or are those synths?) and bloodletting vocals. Things get strange from that point on, however, as mirror balls spin (a dare-we-say-danceable "Crying," the helicopter hook of "Golden Age") and Adebimpe attacks "Dancing Choose" like a mic-wielding battle rapper.

    And then there are the glimmers of drum & bass ("Shout Me Out"), drunken horn sections ("Red Dress," one of several songs to feature members of Antibalas), and carefully-plucked film score strings ("Stork & Owl") that spice up what's clearly TVOTR's most challenging effort yet. Not challenging in the sense of being a rough listen--challenging in terms of rewriting the group's supposed gloomy, stormy aesthetics.

    "You know how people always say that comedians are some of the saddest people in the world?" asks Adebimpe. "Well, the opposite is true, too. As heavy as some of the songs get, the joking around that goes around between the five of us gets out of control sometimes."

    "If people are listening to us because we're dark and brooding, great," adds Sitek, "But I think there's a greater percentage looking for us to do something different with every album. Some of the darkest songs on Dear Science are the more upbeat ones. Like 'Crying' is f**king heavy, dude."

    If you' still toss on such beautifully-damaged tracks as "Dreams" and "Ambulance" when times get tough, don't worry--TV On The Radio still goes for the jugular in the melancholic and moody department. In fact, some of Dear Science sounds downright menacing. Take "DLZ": a fang-baring "f**k you" to the idea of death being "your last chance to do anything" according to Adebimpe, it's some of most frightening, and affecting, music in the TVOTR canon. "Stork & Owl" is much more muted in its mix of skittering beats, wilting strings and gorgeous, multi-tracked harmonies but good luck putting on a happy face after succumbing to its postmodern soul soundtrack.

    "It's like Bukowski once said, 'I write all of this stuff to get away from it,'" explains Adebimpe, who struggled with the deaths of a friend and family member during the making of Dear Science. "Writing is a meditation, an exercise to put away all these painful things.'"

    And that's ultimately what TV On The Radio still hopes to do with its music--they're still looking to connect, to make people feel something, anything no matter how up or down a song's arrangement is.

    "I grew up listening to Joy Division, New Order, Echo & the Bunnymen, the Cure, the Smiths and the Swans," says Malone. "Some of that qualifies as 'goth' but it didn't make me depressed to listen to that music despite what my parents assumed. It didn't add to my 'angst' as a teenager. I simply identitfied with something in the music.

    "It made me feel less alone, you know?" he continues. "If I could be that for someone else, that would make me happy. It'd be a real form of success for me."

    Album Description
    Over two years since their astonishing 2006 album "Return to Cookie Mountain", New York avant garde standard-bearers TV ON THE RADIO return with their long-awaited new album, "Dear Science". Produced by the group?s multi-instrumentalist Dave Sitek, "Dear Science" finds the Brooklyn group fine-tuning what they did best on "Return to Cookie Mountain". The band's Brooklyn friends: the Afro-funk group ANTIBALAS, lend some golden horn rave-ups to "Red Dress" and Katrina Ford of CELEBRATION delivers angelic harmonies on the orchestral closer "Lover's Day". But if beautifully damaged tracks such as "Dreams" and "Ambulance", from their debut album "Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes" is what does it for you, don't worry - TV On The Radio?s latest addition still goes for the jugular in the melancholic and moody department.


    Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

    2 out of 5 stars Not quite there...   October 8, 2008
     17 out of 25 found this review helpful

    I pride myself on not falling into the "it doesn't sound like their other stuff" line of criticism when it comes to drastic artistic change, and as TV on the Radio is one of my favorite bands currently in action I have second-guessed my initial off-putting reaction to this album at every turn. But after three and a half listens, I have to say I just can't get into it.

    The mantra associated with this album is something along the lines of "experimental art-dance-rock at its best." It's clear the word "dance" was heavy on the band's collective mind while creating these songs. This introduces problem number one: a persistent feeling I can't shake from this record is that the "dance" aspect seems so, so forced. TVOTR's live show is decidedly more manic and loud than the meticulously sculpted sounds of Desparate Youth and Cookie Mountain, and I think the urge to boogie their way out from under the murk of experimental art rock is what drove this album. The fact is though, these guys are not intrinsically dancey in this particular way, and as a result their take on dance music sounds like a lot of half-baked ideas jacked from Prince records and thrown awkwardly together with a smattering of their usual droning guitars and cascading vocal parts. It strikes me as a superficial harvesting of off-the-shelf "funk" sounds and rhythms, rather than a re-shaping of their existing sound into a more energized, danceable format.

    This fundamental lack of natural funkiness aside, the overall sound of the production grates on my ears. I'll admit I am so heavily biased towards big, live-sounding recordings that anything less often skews my enjoyment of the songs themselves, but Dear Science sounds overly thin and plasticky to me. The drum parts especially are largely constructed from very insipid, cheesy keyboard samples that honestly wouldn't sound out of place on Britney Spears' first two records, except that they are not as punchy. The beats are often drowning in a sea of strings, horns and fuzz, the frontloaded, super-compressed mixdowns turning these moments into confusing onslaughts of cacophony devoid of space or nuance. Such rough patches could even be saved if there was a strong beat supporting them, but the frenetic, stuffed-to-the-gills approach of the rhythm tracks only contributes to the mess. The mix overall is very hot, and very bright, annihilating the warm ambience of Cookie Mountain or the comfortable thump of a good dance tune. The songs could be good, but the squashed, impotent production often strips them of any potential power.

    I am with TV on the Radio in concept, I think that deploying their unique sonic and musical sensibilities to the dance front is a great idea, but I think they just tried too hard with this release. These truncated songs lack the ingenuity and creativity of their past work, and the tracks lack cohesion with the vocal parts. I think they should have stayed in the studio another few months and worked out their new sound, as this hopefully transitional period sounds depressingly derivative and uninspired to me, like an album of prototypes. At the same time however, it reminds me of Tricky's album Blowback, which I at first detested for its watered-down production but came to love upon revisiting it a year later...so maybe there is a light at the end of the proverbial tunnel for Dear Science. It's certainly as forward-thinking as anything else coming out these days, but the profoundly unfocused feel of it all makes me think maybe it just wasn't ready for prime time.



    3 out of 5 stars Dear Science   September 23, 2008
     12 out of 28 found this review helpful

    Dear Science is the sound of a band with a lot of ideas trying to tie them all together, and not always succeeding. The most general sense of sound on the record is great, with creative instrumentation, crisp electronic production, and restrained drumming. The vocalists are both talented singers, though they stray into mimicking Berlin Trilogy-era Bowie a little too often to present a complete vocal personality. The songs are decent, but the biggest problem that this album faces is that every song essentially begins where it ends. To put it simply, none of the songs seem to go anywhere outside of a basic verse-chorus progression, akin to the droning lull of contemporaries like Spoon. Though the lyrics are intelligent and suitably cryptic, good lyrics do not a good album make, and their value can only serve as a part of the greater whole.

    Opener "Halfway Home" is a prime example of the issues that plague the album. Though the track has a great set of ideas on which it is founded, nothing builds upon the song's base, leaving is feeling nearly the same at the end as it did in the beginning. A little bit of added instrumentation doesn't change the song up enough to make it feel at all progressive in scope. Ballads like "Family Tree" end up being bland and overlong, relying on sweeping strings and hushed vocals to imply the sincerity and emotion that isn't present in the song on its own. Even the 'fun' tracks like "Golden Age" suffer from the same issues as other tracks, taking a repetitive song idea and throwing in some cute dance music ideas.

    With sites like Pitchfork praising this album as highly as they did their previous, it's to be expected that a great number of people are going to jump the bandwagon, even those that only find the band through friend of a friend scenarios. In a way, TV On The Radio are an affirmative action band, populated by black men playing music typically dominated by white hipster suburbanites. Its great that these guys can compete in an arena over-populated with samey white rock bands, but musically, they're hardly leading the pack in terms of originality or pure, raw energy and passion. If the band is fascinated by science, it shows, as this record seems to be too weighed down trying to make 'serious music' to be any fun. My opinion may be in the minority, and I may get slammed for not being "Helpful," but I think that somebody needs to take a critical look at what this album fails to do. It's by no means a bad record, and any fan of TV On The Radio will certainly enjoy it, but at the end of the day, this record is nowhere near one of the best releases of the year.



    3 out of 5 stars Good but not great   October 6, 2008
     10 out of 13 found this review helpful

    I expected more from this album. While there are some amazing tracks (Halfway Home and Golden Age especially), the album generally seems to lack risk and inventiveness and the heavy production rounds most of corners and makes the music feel too empty. There is little room for excitement or surprise here. People talk about "the album as an experience" and I must say there is a lack of one here. I can't listen to Dear Science, beginning to end...it starts to sound too similar and labored. There are assuredly bright spots and I recommend checking this album out but I can only justify the massive critical acclaim for Dear Science, in believing that this is merely a good album in a weaker year for music (so far).


    5 out of 5 stars Ours is a feeling   September 23, 2008
     9 out of 15 found this review helpful

    TV On the Radio is one of those is rarest and most precious in contemporary music -- they actually possess creativity, talent, and an earthy musical power.

    And if their brilliant sophomore album was a dense exploration of a "Cookie Mountain," then their third album is a dance-filled festival of colour and vivacious song. "Dear Science" sounds like TV on the Radio has stepped back from their more intense work, decided to have some fun with their music, and whipped the same sounds into a dancier, warmer album. And it works brilliantly.

    They warm up with the thumping, breathless post-rock of "Halfway Home," an ever-building cloud of subtle instrumentation and mellow vocals. It's very reminiscent of the band's prior work, and serves as a bridge to their new sound. And it soon becomes evident that the band is not just trying to get a catchy single on the radio -- they rush through the funk-jazzy warmth of "Crying" and the delightfully wild electro-funk of "Dancing Choose," which sounds like the band got pumped full of caffeine.

    Then they try all sorts of other songs -- wild dancy electro-funk, slow wistful jazz-ballads, the string-laden post-rock of, hip-hoppy rock numbers strung with golden keyboard, and even a mellow, soulful jazzy-electro ballad ("Lonely the love dog that/no one knows the ways of"). And it finishes up with a trio of stunningly unpolished dance songs -- the blazing, fast-moving "Shout Me Out," the swirlingly bleak "DLZ" and finally the dense uplifting thicket of "Lover's Day."

    The absolute peak of all this the organic beats and funky rhythms of "Golden Age," as Tunde Adebimpe whispers suitably offbeat lyrics in a high-pitched voice. But then the tight electro-funky song blooms into a great sweeping mass of movie-musical-style trumpets and epic strings, still saturated with a funky beat and joyous cries of "Oh it's a miracle... and there's a golden age/coming round, coming round, COMING ROOOOOOUUNNNDDD..."

    Few bands are able to take all the elements of their music, mix it up in a blender, and then reconstruct them in a completely different -- but equally brilliant -- way. "Dear Science" would be a brilliant album just taken on its own merits, but the enormity of what TV on the Radio was able to do with their distinctive sound makes it even more mind-blowing.

    In a sense, their music is both darker and more entertaining -- we get plenty of solid guitar work, ranging from buzzing postrock riffs to a blazing rock'n'roll drive, as well as a sweeps of movie-style strings, a powerful horn section that blazes out in songs like "Lover's Day," dancy beats, and the unstoppable webs of ever-shifting synth that snare your ear like a spiderweb. Though they're more confident and assured than ever, they still have that rough edge that keeps the poppiest song from sounding, you know, studio-polished.

    Tunde Adebimpe has a voice like a cup of strong coffee -- it's powerful, organic, and a little bit bitter around the edges. He raps, he croons, he murmurs, he snarls, he sings over the blazing horns. And the lyrics he sings, while not quite the most focused work they've done, are still brilliantly meaty stuff that spans everything from death to newspaper men, love dogs to forbidden love ("Alone in the ceiling/ours is a feeling/not that they would see/they don't know that we could be/the million cradles in the sea...")

    "Dear Science" is brilliant example of just how far TV on the Radio's talents go -- they can change their entire style and yet sound like no one but themselves.



    1 out of 5 stars outkast meets coldplay and does most of the talking   September 25, 2008
     8 out of 21 found this review helpful

    unbelievable. i dont remember the last time i was this disappointed. i can deal with, and would even welcome, the change in musical style, but the severe decline in artistic quality is unacceptable. what stood out on return to cookie mountain was the bands unique sound, which they pulled off without being overshadowed by their musical influences. when listening to dear science, however, i made a very strong, very immediate association with another band FIRST. it sounds like the idea was to emulate someone elses sound, then try (and fail) to make it their own by using additional instruments and cool sound effects. i cant deny that the production really is first rate, with meticulous attention to detail, but i still prefer the raw-sounding production used on cookie mountain, and theres no comparison between the two releases in terms of originality. sadly, i found more to be in common with extremely derivative, corporate-sponsored products like coldplay and outkast... dont be surprised if you hear a lot more of dear science in car and computer commercials, your local target store, and the latest meaningless teenage/college drama movie of the month.

    HALFWAY HOME instantly reminded me of coldplay, with some bloc party thrown in for good measure. i will admit, the vocal range on display in this track is impressive and gets my vote for best moment on the cd. unfortunately, the lyrics fail to inspire and the half-hearted, basic, all-purpose stadium dance/rock ending ruins an otherwise decent song.

    CRYING, DANCING CHOOSE, STORK & OWL, and GOLDEN AGE could all conceivably be on an outkast album. stage-forward drums, music-box melodies and hand claps galore. the problem is, outkast does it better, and at least makes me want to dance before i forget about them for the rest of my life.

    golden age in particular has utterly embarrassing lyrics that exemplify the content on most of the cd:

    "oh here it comes, like a natural disaster
    all blown up like a, ghettoblaster
    oh here it comes, bring it faster
    oh here it comes, bring it faster"

    im not kidding, those are the lyrics (as accurately as i can hear them, anyway.) hey, decide for yourself, but that shouldnt satisfy anyone with high artistic standards.

    FAMILY TREE sounds like coldplay performing a ballad, and features equally poor, sophomoric lyrics that force the listener to endure verses that rhyme the words, "be, sea, tree, me, and three." seriously, that type of drivel makes me feel nauseous. add to that the generic, overexposed and unemotional strings recklessly tacked onto the end (a la mellon collie & the infinite sadness) and my skin is crawling with discomfort.

    RED DRESS revisits outkast once again.... blah, blah, blah...

    LOVE DOG treats us to a postal service styled intro, followed by some more boredom, then concludes with an amber-era autechre-like reverberating drum pattern, accompanied by more generic strings.

    the last three tracks are just so bad, too nondescript for description and almost not even worth mentioning... although i will comment on LOVERS DAY, which features a two-minute coda that most closely resembles a high school marching band practice session... the junior varsity squad.

    ive been eagerly anticipating the release of massive attacks new cd, even more so because sitek was producing it. now im nervous.



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