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 Sedated Times by 120 Days, download iTunes now.

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

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Sedated Times

120 Days

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Very few bands release really remarkable debut singles, and very few Norwegian bands manage to excite parts of the international music intelligentsia. With Sedated Times, young Oslo-based quartet 120 Days, then known as the Beautiful People, managed both. Their sound is both original and modern enough to fit in with the so-called "new rock" of the early 2000s. Their use of a drum machine and Kraftwerk-esque analogue synthesizers rather than guitars sets them apart from most of the leading international neo-rock bands. But there's a certain desperate-yet-tuneful tone to singer Ådne Meisfjord's distorted voice that made several critics rightfully compare him with a young Iggy Pop and Julian Casablancas of the Strokes. But 120 Days have something more going for them. Not that they are timeless, of course. Nothing is. But their songs have these irresistible pop hooks and vocal melodies that could have made them hits in pretty much every one of the last four or five decades. High-tempo opener "Every Day" is so bold that it opens with a ultra-catchy chorus and just gets better, deservedly making it an indie hit in Norway. "F****d Myself Up on a Friday Night" is a successful update of the Velvet Underground circa 1968, sounding dirty and messy as hell, backed by industrial-sounding noise. The real standout, though, is the third and last song, "Sedated Times." It's a classic tale of small-town misery with a poetically desperate wanting-to-get-out-before-it-kills-me theme of such great artists as Bruce Springsteen and fellow Scandinavian pop poet Håkan Hellström. The lyrics, whether knowingly or not, even evoke classic Greek tragedy in the couplet "I've seen to much/let me go blind," and manage to do so without ever going over the top. This is powerful stuff from a band that undoubtedly has a great recording future ahead of it

Customer Reviews

riveting.

at the least this album makes you want to stand up, grab your jacket, go out and see yourself in the world in a new way. it's cool when that happens...

a lovely sound

When I saw 120 Days as part of the opening act for Ratatat I fell in love the the sounds that they made. Feel it.

Biography

Formed: 2002 in Oslo, Norway

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '00s

Norwegian teenaged friends Jonas Dahl, Arne Kvalvik, Kjetil Ovesen, and Ådne Meisfjord originally formed 120 Days under the guise of "Beautiful People" in the autumn of 2001. Relocating to Oslo, the group developed their sound and performed extensively throughout the country, releasing two EPs on the Public Demand imprint in the process. After several high-profile gigs such as the Reading and Leeds Festivals in the U.K. and the Sonar Festival in Spain, the group signed with Norway's Smalltown...
Full Bio
Sedated Times, 120 Days
View In iTunes
  • $6.93
  • Genres: Alternative, Music, Rock, Indie Rock
  • Released: Jun 26, 2007

Customer Ratings

Influencers

Contemporaries

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