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Horn Of Plenty

Grizzly Bear

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Album Review

Grizzly Bear's debut offers up a lysergic brand of minimalist psychedelic folk perfect for those who find Elliott Smith's early work a bit too accessible and upbeat. Largely the home recording project of singer/songwriter Ed Droste, Horn of Plenty was eventually augmented by multi-instrumentalist Christopher Bear. To these ends, the album features a mostly melancholy mix of acoustic guitars, reeds, retro organs, and samples, all drenched in enough acid-washed effects to give Devendra Banhart flashbacks. Droste's weary, somnambulistic vocals work well with the slackadaisical melodies to create an unsettling atmospheric sound full of shimmering shadows. Songs like the opening "Deep Sea Diver" and the mesmerizing "Shift" crawl along at an almost funereal pace, the latter featuring what sounds like a scratchy Gramophone recording of a piano augmented only by echoing whistles, clapping, trippy found sounds, and weirdly hypnotic multi-tracked vocals. As a whole, the album produces a murky sound that unfolds like a narcotic dream you can't quite shake upon waking. This is the kind of album you'll want to listen to late at night, perhaps a few sheets to the wind, with the lights off and headphones on to allow these creepy, quiet little tunes to worm their way into your subconscious.

Customer Reviews

Are you kidding? No reviews?!

Wow. I am shocked to find that nobody has written a review?? Even after the release of Veckatimest? This is Grizzly Bear's debut album and it is certainly worthy of being their first. Many bands sound evolve over time but their debut album always stands out as being different (kind of like Pablo Honey for Radiohead)...Some of the songs don't work for me and are too washed with noise but some of them are AMAZING. Listening to this album is like living in a waking dream.

Great Debut by Grizzly Bear

This album is the second album by Grizzly Bear that I have listened to, the first being Veckatimist like many other listeners. The sound of this album I think is amazing. It is somewhat psychedelic with layers of washed-out sound and fuzzed over vocals. I always think it is interesting to see how a band's sound evolves over time and with Grizzly Bear, it has really changed and evolved from shoegazer ballads to pounding, bright indie-pop that is not present in this record. Compared with Veckatimist, the sound is not as smooth and refined, it is more raw and trancelike. I think that this is a beatiful debut record for a great band. A lot more is going to be seen of Grizzly Bear.

I agree with the below.

Grizzly Bear has always been amazing and always will be.
Their sound has changed a tad, but it's still them which is the best part.
I agree with the below in saying that they are like no other.

Biography

Formed: 2002 in Brooklyn, NY

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Grizzly Bear began as a home recording project for Boston-bred experimentalist Edward Droste, the son of an elementary school teacher, who laid the groundwork for the band's otherworldly debut album on a small hand-held tape recorder while holed up for 15 months in his Greenpoint, Brooklyn, apartment. His homespun D.I.Y. effort took on new life with the help of multi-instrumentalist Christopher Bear, a Chicago native who had worked in a diverse range of musical...
Full Bio

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