iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store…If iTunes doesn’t open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Odd Blood by Yeasayer, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Odd Blood

Yeasayer

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Don’t judge a book by its cover… or an album by its first track. Odd Blood gets off to an odd start with “The Children” — a robotic, plodding song that prizes mood over melody — before settling into a more balanced groove, mixing the multicultural sounds of Yeasayer's debut with a new emphasis on electronica, global trip-hop, and digital production. Like All Hour Cymbals, this is a thinking man’s album, one that requires its listeners to put on their thinking caps as well as their dancing shoes. It’s more urban than its predecessor, though, with most songs ditching the tribal harmonies and lo-fi analog ambience of the band’s earlier work in favor of an electric, textured sound. “Love Me Girl,” with its mix of Balearic beat keyboards and sampled female vocals, could have come from an Ibiza nightclub, while “Madder Red” strikes an unlikely balance between synth pop, Middle Eastern folk, and ‘80s dance music. Anand Wilder often abandons his guitar entirely, focusing instead on the keyboards that serve as Odd Blood’s bedrock, and he sings the latter song in a voice that’s clear, pleasant, and devoid of the yelping that characterized some of All Hour Cymbals’ tracks. Chris Keating has similarly improved, so much so that he delivers a rather stunning ballad — the Air-influenced “I Remember” — with warmth and understated confidence. Odd Blood’s emphasis on genre-mashing can overwhelm the weaker tunes, whose melodies are sometimes less interesting than the arrangements themselves, but the album has enough highlights to outweigh any filler on side B. All in all, this is a rare sophomore album that widens the band's sound without narrowing its appeal.

Customer Reviews

Different direction....

but it paid off....AMAZING new pop sound and an AMAZING album.....it's going to be one of the best of the year anchored by Ambling Amp and O.N.E......lots of layers, samples and interesting sounds....all balanced perfectly. BUY IT!

Great switch-up from alternative to electronic

If the weird, African and Middle Eastern-tinged flavor of Yeasayer’s 2007 debut album All Hour Cymbals impressed you, get ready to be transported. Yeasayer leaves the tribal aesthetic of their debut behind for an electronic vibe, with distorted vocals, synths and pounding bass-lines that demand a move to the dance-floor. It’s an ambitious switch-up, but the Brooklyn-based trio pull it off without looking like they’re trying too hard. They channel a bizarre mix of genres on their new tracks while maintaining a distinct and cohesive sound that fans.

The overall feeling of Odd Blood is hard to pin down, touching on themes of love and relationships and without a doubt more upbeat than All Hour Cymbals’ morose, near-apocalyptic reflections. Listening to it blurs the borders between genres in a way that is at once reminiscent of a number of bands, without reminding you too much of anyone in particular. On the dreamy “I Remember” the quivering melodies could be straight out of song by Animal Collective, while the opening drum beat in “Mondegreen” sounds like it’s been sampled right off a MSTRKRFT track. The album’s two singles (“Ambling Alp” and “O.N.E.”) are both heady and uplifting, garnished with Yeasayer’s whimsical lyrics and a strong injection of bass.

Absolutely amazing

If you have 1 album to buy so far this year spend the money on this. No bad songs, great composition, amazing sound.

Biography

Formed: Brooklyn, NY

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s, '10s

The music of Brooklyn's Yeasayer is an eclectic, genre-bending journey into pop, rock, Middle Eastern and African musics, folk, and dub. Vocalist/keyboardist Chris Keating and vocalist/guitarist Anand Wilder were both raised in Baltimore, where they honed their vocal skills in a barbershop quartet and played in a high-school band, Sic Transit, before leaving town to attend different colleges. Years later, the two relocated to New York and began shaping the project that would...
Full bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.