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Feel Good Lost

Broken Social Scene

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Album Review

Broken Social Scene cast an abstract web of dream pop, shoegaze, and indie rock for their debut album, Feel Good Lost. Essentially, it's an album of instrumentals. The title itself hints at the collective's effort in composing a lush soundscape of strings, brass, guitars, and pianos with an added dash of electronic beats. Songs such as "Guilty Cubicles" and "Blues for Uncle Gibb" alone showcase the band's well-crafted mind trip. For a first album, though, Broken Social Scene's care in allowing each song to breathe without the constructs of fancy production and contrived lyrics is what makes the dozen-track selection so impressive. It's expressive without expressing too much. Broken Social Scene leave it up to the mixture of instruments to draw upon some kind of palette. From the layered warbling of "Stomach Song" to the majestic horn arrangements of the gossamer "Passport Radio," the intricacies of Feel Good Lost find a band focused on creating an inventive style of music as well as a group that is insanely ambitious. It might not catch on with indie rock fans right away and it will most likely be an overlooked debut, but its breadth shows promise.

Customer Reviews

So beautiful...

from the very first note/introduction of this album it gives me that special feeling...being swept away to another place...this continues all the way to the end.the album's overall cohesiveness is astounding, i've never heard an album that flows so well...and the mood is so nice..passport radio is a standout for me..i could just imagine hearing it looking out the window 30,000 feet in the air on an airline flight...this album is simply gorgeous..a song like guilty cubicles conjures up many of those sunny day sweet memories in my life..definitely an album of inner reflection and contemplation...

Broken Social Scene - Feel Good Lost

Pros - Quite possibly one of the greatest instrumental albums I'll ever hear. You can tell that they put their heart into the songs because you can pick up on the emotions each song portrays, and you'll feel it for sure. Cons - Two of the songs, (Prison Province and Stomach Song) don't belong on this album. Prison Province's undeniable pointlessness, and Stomach Song's odd and uneeded vocals is why. Good Songs - Guilty Cubicles, Love and Mathematics, Blues for Uncle Gibb

Beautiful, arguably transcendant

This is, by far, my favourite instrumental rock album. It's nothing like BSS's other records (save for some of "Bee Hives"), but every song is crafted with such skill that it's hard not to fall in love with this record. It's not something you sit back and focus all your attention on, but it is certainly something to be played in most any situation. There are no lyrics, but there don't NEED to be any lyrics. In fact, I can't think of a situation on this album where the addition of lyrics, or anything else for that matter, would do anything except damage the album. For all intents and purposes, this album is completely flawless.

Biography

Formed: 1999 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s

Broken Social Scene materialized in 1999 when K.C. Accidental's Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning, formerly of By Divine Right, bonded their friendship into a band. They spent the next few years honing an atmospheric rock sound in their native Toronto and the dynamic was great. Feel Good Lost marked their debut album in 2001 and introduced a revolving cast of Canadian indie musicians. Drew's fellow mate from Do Make Say Think, Charles Spearin, was added to the band, as well as Evan Cranley (Stars),...
Full Bio

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