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Dear Science (Bonus Track Version)

TV On the Radio

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Album Review

With lyrics and vocals that are just as ambitious and attention-getting as the music surrounding them, TV on the Radio have always had a lot going on in their music. Indeed, Return to Cookie Mountain was so elaborate that topping it would be difficult, so on Dear Science, (yes, the comma is intentional) the band channels its focus into lean, nimble songs with more structure and polish — and more focus on Tunde Adepimbe's and Kyp Malone's vocals — than any of TV on the Radio's previous work. This immediacy and crystalline clarity take some getting used to, especially compared to Cookie Mountain's lavish yet organic sound: "Family Tree"'s strings, pianos, and plainly worded vulnerability make it one of the band's most accessible songs, but it doesn't feel like anything was sacrificed to make it so anthemic. That feeling only deepens on the self-evidently sexy "Red Dress," which uses Antibalas' vibrant brass and taut guitars to show-stopping effect.

As Dear Science, unfolds, it becomes clear that it isn't so much a radical change for TV on the Radio as it is a slight but significant shift in approach. "Stork and Owl," an inspired mix of hypnotically looping samples and flowing, real-time soulfulness, and "Love Dog," which boasts some of Adepimbe's most affecting singing since "Staring at the Sun," could have fit easily on earlier albums with a few sonic tweaks. And, like Desperate Youth, Bloodthirsty Babes and Return to Cookie Mountain, Dear Science, begins with an epic statement of purpose — although "Halfway Home" is as sleek as it is grand, sprinting towards its end with streaking guitars — and ends in an embrace with "Lover's Day," a duet with Celebration's Katrina Ford that turns "I wanna break your back" from a threat to a come-on. Tackling love and war, often within the same song, is all in a day's work for TV on the Radio. However, the band's take on these themes is subtly but notably more optimistic here, as though lightening their sound lightened their mood as well. "DLZ" broods over "the long-winded blues of the never," but on the brilliantly funky "Golden Age," Adepimbe sings "there's a golden age coming 'round" without a trace of irony. Malone's "Crying" calls out the wrongs of the world but ends up just as hopeful as it is angry, while the pun in "Dancing Choose"'s title is pointed enough that the song almost doesn't need to prove that dancing on your troubles is powerfully therapeutic as thoroughly as it does, but that's just another example of this album's rare balance between craft and passion. That comma at the title's end seems naggingly open-ended at first, but it's actually a perfect fit for Dear Science,'s openness to possibilities and positivity. [A digital version was also released.]

Customer Reviews

Not bad, but...

I wanted to really like this, and I do (Halfway Home amongst half a dozen other tracks, is lovely), but I really, really wanted to like it even more, and I don't. I mean it 'does', it fills the air with pleasant, sometimes unexpected and delightful noises, but you know I haven't listened to it for a week now and I can't remember a single thing about it, except some Bowie Golden Years nods here and there. It isn't dishonest, but does it snag at the heart? Does it make one feel drunk with pleasure? Will it, in a few years time, be the soundtrack to my memories of 2008? I think I can say 'Nope' to that already. It's faded away with just a slightly sour feeling that the hideous vocal style of the Scissor Sisters has had a baleful effect on too many groups recently. Too much clever in the head stuff, clever in the studio stuff and not enough of that special indefinable something that turns this cheap art form of pop music into something else entirely. Say it very quietly, but I think Britney's recent stuff stands a better chance of eternal life than these guys unless something quite amazing happens, and then I'll be there. Say it more loudly, I think they can do it. Just stop being so very clever. I've listened to each song's 30 second fragment again to refresh my memory and, yep, all the tracks almost without exception engage the ears (Not thrilled about Dancing Choose however), but leave little behind. It's a weak cappuccino, no hint of a double expresso let along the mulish kick of grappa. Now I sound pretentious. Buy it, live with it and if it stays with you then that's great. If it doesn't, well the money hasn't broken the bank, and in two years stumble across it again and think, yeah, that's alright, not bad. Not bad.

Outstanding

Why is it the American's are making the best music? No-one in the UK comes close to making a mother like this. This is serious music and one that comes when people might have thought they had peaked. Not only contender for album of the year but TV On The Radio are contenders for one of the decade's best. Buy, buy, buy!

Exciting Progression

Simply put, buy the record, you will not be disappointed, and fortunately it gets better with time too. Despite some people saying that it is not what 'Return To Cookie Mountain' had promised in terms of progression, realistically, they had to depart, like any good band, and they happened to have weaved pop formulae into the mix, along with a newly found clarity in their production (something some might say RTCM was lacking). This if anything is fantastic, widening their audience, to get across their message. And they do have one. With the accessibility of the majority of tracks here, it is easy to get distracted, but pay attention to the lyrics, and you might be surprised how alarming they sound, how relevant they are in the face of recent news stories. TV, on the RADIO: the name surely gives a clue, that this is not music to be passive to. Cannot wait to see what they do next. And by the way iTUNES, wrong fucking preview on Dogs Of Light, thats Dumb Animal you numbskulls.

Biography

Formed: 2001 in Brooklyn, NY

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s, '10s

The Brooklyn-based group TV on the Radio mix post-punk, electronic, and other atmospheric elements in such a creative way that it only makes sense that their core duo, vocalist Tunde Adebimpe and multi-instrumentalist/producer David Andrew Sitek, are both visual artists as well as musicians. Adebimpe is a graduate of NYU's film school and specializes in stop-motion animation, which his Brothers Quay-like video for the Yeah Yeah Yeahs single...
Full bio

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