Being stoned to this record compliments it so well actually. I've been spinning it while I smoke before bed nearly every night since I got my copy and the vibe is so relaxing. Its pretty high up there in terms of great smoking records for me now.
Haven't smoked to this record yet, but I'd imagine it's awesome. Funny because the lyrics seem to encourage sobriety, but ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Hahaha my thoughts exactly. It encourages a clean-cut lifestyle and whatnot. I suppose you can smoke to anything though
The weather is so good today and the walk back from work is much more bearable while listening to this album
I hate to be negative but this is really boring, Super Natural is the only song I see myself going back to
whenever someone says the only song that sticks with them on first listen is a single, i always think, "well yeah, its the one you're familiar with. give it time to grow." so, yeah. thats my advice.
Turnover: Good Nature Album Review | Pitchfork 7.3 on Pitchfork, that's awesome. I really like this Ian review.
It's so strong at the start, falls off around curiosity but picks back up around Nightlight Girl for me
Wow, I'm glad my actual vinyl wasn't damaged, that sucks. Such a bummer because it's one of my favorite designs I own.
yeah this definitely blends together for me. nothing bad though. this'll probably be pretty good study music this fall.
I personally can't stand Ian ever since his Hotelier "It Never Goes Out" review where he clearly didn't listen to the music enough to identify that the lyrics he directly quoted, and called out as immature, censored the word fucker with butthead. Also there's the whole ever converging Pitchfork ranking scale where an 8/10 is a 10/10 and a 6/10 is a 0/10.
Ian is a huge Hotelier fan, so that's odd. You can think about him what you want, but he's bringing exposure to this scene (Brand New, ManOrch, Turnover, Title Fight, Hotelier, etc.) on debatably the biggest music website. He's okay by me. The only thing he's done that I'm really not a fan of was his personal attacking of Brian Fallon in his Get Hurt review.