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How It Feels to Be Something On
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How It Feels to Be Something On
Current price: $11.99
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Barnes and Noble
How It Feels to Be Something On
Current price: $11.99
Size: CD
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The cryptically titled
How It Feels to Be Something On
was the first fruit of
Sunny Day Real Estate
's reunion, and it simultaneously smoothed out their sound while shifting it into something altogether more ambitious. Always somewhat arty and challenging to begin with,
SDRE
flirts with out-and-out
prog rock
here, cleaning up the production to reveal the contrasting layers in their ever more intricate arrangements. There's a droning, almost Middle Eastern feel to some of the songs, pointing up
Jeremy Enigk
's newfound taste for spiritual mysticism (though the mantra-like chanting on
"The Prophet"
comes off a little awkwardly).
Enigk
has matured greatly as a vocalist, applying lessons learned from his solo project; gone is the strangled roar he frequently used on
Diary
, but even while confirming his softer bent, he's reined in the swooning, bordering-on-fey excess of
LP2
. Similarly, the band's musicianship keeps getting sharper, handling the twisting chord progressions with an easy grace that keeps the songs flowing smoothly into one another. Almost too smoothly, in fact -- if the album has a flaw, it's that the climactic peaks don't seem to scale quite the same heights as on the band's other albums. That's a minor complaint, to be sure, but perhaps that's why
can feel at times like a dry run for the magnificently perfected
The Rising Tide
, where
's piercing falsetto really hits its stride and where the band's songwriting fulfills their every anthemic ambition. But that's only in hindsight; taken on its own terms,
is a remarkable step forward from a band that seemed destined to leave its full potential untapped. ~ Steve Huey
How It Feels to Be Something On
was the first fruit of
Sunny Day Real Estate
's reunion, and it simultaneously smoothed out their sound while shifting it into something altogether more ambitious. Always somewhat arty and challenging to begin with,
SDRE
flirts with out-and-out
prog rock
here, cleaning up the production to reveal the contrasting layers in their ever more intricate arrangements. There's a droning, almost Middle Eastern feel to some of the songs, pointing up
Jeremy Enigk
's newfound taste for spiritual mysticism (though the mantra-like chanting on
"The Prophet"
comes off a little awkwardly).
Enigk
has matured greatly as a vocalist, applying lessons learned from his solo project; gone is the strangled roar he frequently used on
Diary
, but even while confirming his softer bent, he's reined in the swooning, bordering-on-fey excess of
LP2
. Similarly, the band's musicianship keeps getting sharper, handling the twisting chord progressions with an easy grace that keeps the songs flowing smoothly into one another. Almost too smoothly, in fact -- if the album has a flaw, it's that the climactic peaks don't seem to scale quite the same heights as on the band's other albums. That's a minor complaint, to be sure, but perhaps that's why
can feel at times like a dry run for the magnificently perfected
The Rising Tide
, where
's piercing falsetto really hits its stride and where the band's songwriting fulfills their every anthemic ambition. But that's only in hindsight; taken on its own terms,
is a remarkable step forward from a band that seemed destined to leave its full potential untapped. ~ Steve Huey