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The Else

They Might Be Giants

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from They Might Be Giants

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 I'm Impressed They Might Be Giants 2:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Take Out the Trash They Might Be Giants 3:14 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Upside Down Frown They Might Be Giants 2:17 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Climbing the Walls They Might Be Giants 3:15 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Careful What You Pack They Might Be Giants 2:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 The Cap'm They Might Be Giants 3:11 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 With the Dark They Might Be Giants 3:17 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 The Shadow Government They Might Be Giants 2:37 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Bee of the Bird of the Moth They Might Be Giants 3:31 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Withered Hope They Might Be Giants 2:54 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Contrecoup They Might Be Giants 3:11 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Feign Amnesia They Might Be Giants 2:29 $0.99 View In iTunes
13 The Mesopotamians They Might Be Giants 2:57 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

For their twelfth full-length — and first "rock" album in three years — They Might Be Giants recruited the Dust Brothers as co-producers, a combination nearly as intriguing as the fact that the duo released The Else digitally via iTunes more than a month before it was issued on CD. Pairing the Dust Brothers' sonic invention with John Linnell and John Flansburgh's winning ways with words and melodies should be a dream collaboration; after all, the producers' work with Beck was just as witty and playful as it was funky and innovative. Nearly every time They Might Be Giants has ventured into territory that might be considered strange (Apollo 18's "Fingertips" mini-songs, their foray into children's music), they've pulled it off with flair. However, The Else is surprisingly — and at times, a little disappointingly — straightforward, particularly on its first half. While "I'm Impressed"'s distorted beat reflects the Dust Brothers' influence on the album (though this track isn't one that they produced) and "Take out the Trash" is a brassy, winning admonition to a girl to dump her loser boyfriend, The Else begins with a string of songs that are fun but not especially memorable. Fortunately, the album's second half is much stronger. "With the Dark" rambles playfully from a ballad about a girl who hates sunlight to a lumbering section about a pirate tired of his "nautical dreams" and then into much more surreal territory; likewise "Withered Hope" tells the tale of a sad sack yet sounds like anything but. With its circular wordplay, "The Bee of the Bird of the Moth" feels like a classic TMBG track, as does "The Mesopotamians," which marries one of the album's hookiest melodies with the antics of "Sargon, Hammurabi, Ashurbanipal and Gilgamesh" and ends up sounding like the theme song for a show about a Monkees-like band set in ancient times. "Contrecoup," which deals with phrenology and other obsolete sciences and words, is another in a long line of They Might Be Giants songs that uses your head for thinking as well as bobbing it to the beat. Indeed, the second half of The Else is so good that it's a little frustrating that the entire album isn't this solid. Still, there are more than enough good moments to keep longtime fans happy. [The CD version of The Else comes with "Cast Your Pod to the Wind," a bonus disc of podcast highlights. For die-hard fans who don't already have the podcasts, this disc is worth the price of admission — the loungy cover of Joe Meek's "I Hear a New World" and songs about mysterious beards and other TMBG-like phenomena capture the band's most adorably off-the-cuff moments.]

Recent Customer Reviews

This song is amazing!!! from Lady Gaga209
     
by mrs.jasper hale :)

We learned about Mesopitamia in World History Honors and listened to this song and my friends have been singing it ever since!!!

A solid album that sticks with you years later
     
by Yappy's Dog Treats

The Else has been out for over two years now, and it still holds up as one of They Might Be Giants' best albums. I'll go so far to say it's one of the better albums released by any band this past decade.
The songs are very catchy and deceptively deep. "The Mesopotamians" at first listen seems like a jokey Monkees homage, yet on subsequent listens it becomes clear that it also contains other themes: fear of being forgotten, and how pop culture ultimately has no place in the span of history.
"I'm Impressed" is a wonderfully dark song about post 9/11 America. The lyrics "I'm inspired by events to remember the exits in back of me" are as chilling as you can get for a TMBG song.
Really, the only stinker on here is "Take Out the Trash". If the track were omitted I would call this a perfect album.
Highly recommended.

Consistent Consistency Consistently
     
by GlojoESQ

TMBG has NEVER disappointed me. This continues the tradition.

Biography

Formed: 1983 in Boston, MA

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s

Combining a knack for infectious melodies with a quirky, bizarre sense of humor and a vaguely avant-garde aesthetic borrowed from the New York post-punk underground, They Might Be Giants became one of the most unlikely alternative success stories of the late '80s and early '90s. Musically, the duo of...
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