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 9

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 Dusk and Summer by Dashboard Confessional, download iTunes now.

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

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Dusk and Summer

Dashboard Confessional

View More by this Artist

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

iTunes Review

On the band’s fourth studio album, Dusk and Summer, Dashboard Confessional continued to turn up the volume (not quite to 11), adding even more layers of big guitars and epic grandiosity to what had previously been mostly acoustic territory. Suffering from a lack of texture and variety, Dusk feels a bit homogenous as you work your way through the entire collection, but a number of standout songs spice things up. The title track is a real beauty, likely a candidate for many a love-struck victim trying to hang on to what was, and another more subtle track, “Stolen,” features a breathless Chris Carrabba confessing, “you have stolen my heart,” bobbing and floating on a fragile current of guitar and drums. Counting Crows vocalist Adam Duritz provides a nice counterbalance to Carrabba’s vocals on the sweet piano ballad, “So Long, So Long,” and “Slow Decay” takes the pure rock esthetic that opens the collection on “Don’t Wait” (the album’s first single) and takes it a level higher, with dark lyrics and Carrabba’s trademark soaring vocals propelled by some true screamo energy. “Heaven Here,” especially, has arena rock sincerity coursing through its pulsating, fist-pumping veins, as do a few other tracks of lesser note. But when you’ve got heavyweight producers like Daniel Lanois and Don Gilmore at the helm, what do you expect? This ain’t hipster night at the Indie Club, or beret night at the Jazzbo Lounge. You’re here to rock, right?

Customer Reviews

Flawless Album
     

Dusk and Summer = Perfect.

Seriously! All of the songs on this album are worth a listen....
Don't Wait -- A really beautiful song with strong vocals
Reason to Believe -- One of my favorites, a really awesome rock song, with captivating lyrics
The Secrets In the Telling -- This one stands out, it's catchy and you'll play it again and again.
Stolen -- One of the best!! Practically eveyones favortie song, it has a beautiful messege with heart-stopping lyrics that will make you cry
Rooftop and Invitations -- Great song, another hard-core rock song like Secrets in the Telling
So Long, So Long -- Another song that might bring you to tears.
Currents -- A change, a slow song, but still amazing, one of the best.
Slow Decay -- Another uniqe song, the vocals are great
Dusk and Summer -- Tells a great story within perfect music
Heaven Here -- The music is different, with the twinkling kind of sound playing in the background, not the best, but still really good.
Vindicated -- One of the popular ones besides Stolen, if you liked stolen you'll like this one.

Hope this review convices you to buy the album!

hmm....
     

I am a diehard Dashboard fan, my favorite band, hands down, but i was kinda dissapointed with this album. I absolutly love their previous albums ( Swiss Army Romance, The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most, and A Mark A Mission A Brand A Scar)... and so ive waited like 3 years for this album to come out and this is it? Dont get me wrong, it's not bad, i mean any Dashboard is better then no Dashboard, but im not in love with it. It seems to "mainstream" for me and feels over produced. The other DC albums felt rawer i guess.. and just conveyed so much more emotion. Has some good songs but as a whole im not feeling it as much as old dashboard.... and btw, why is vindicated (an amazing song) on here? that song is from '04 (Spiderman 2 soundtrack) hmm.. kinda weird.

Mediocre at best
     

This is a perfect example of a group that used to have that indie-vibe and alternative shimmer. Chris Carrabba has catered to the mainstream teenie-bopper grunge-aspiring 'indie fans' with this effort.

Further Seems Forever is so far in the past it's painful. (For those of you who don't know who FSF is, do yourself the favor of checking out some of his earlier work that truely conveys a sense of honesty and sincerety)

The popular cut 'Stolen' may stand out as the only one even worth a listen. If you want some real music that is on the edge of revolutionary check out Pitchfork Media.com.

I wouldn't quite call this a sell-out per say, but rather the end of a steady slide into mainsteam sound. 2 stars.

Biography

Formed: 1999 in Boca Raton, FL

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Singer/songwriter Christopher Carrabba became the poster boy for a new generation of emo fans in the early 2000s, having left behind his former band (the post-hardcore Christian outfit Further Seems Forever) to concentrate on vulnerable, introspective solo musings. Armed with an acoustic guitar and soul-baring song lyrics, he christened his new project Dashboard Confessional — named after a lyric in "The Sharp Hint of New Tears" — and began releasing material in 2000. By 2001's The Place...
Full Bio

Top Albums and Songs by Dashboard Confessional