Fleet Foxes - Fleet Foxes from Ocean Grown on Vimeo. Fleet Foxes have released the video for 'Grown Ocean', one of the themes of his second album Helplessness Blues, which, as I assume you already know are interested in the band, has been leaked recently, although in principle the release date the album remains as it was planned that on May 3 that, for those not wanting to get into the car for leaks, leaving them enough time to go to Primavera Sound 2011 with the lesson learned.
If the title song of the album look good, do not know if I can say the same about this "Ocean Grown." When you hear the start of the topic giddy and happy, waiting for the first explosion outside the melancholy of Fleet Foxes, but the band takes off his self-imposed straitjacket. In Helplessness Blues will not expand, unless last-minute surprise, his palette of sounds.
As demonstrated by "Ocean Grown", the Seattle band remains true to its folk, here's something more akin to the baroque style of Sufjan Stevens (look at those wind arrangements there as a cushion for the topic). Is to discover whether what they said about the new album would be "less and less cheerful pop" and finally, if no alterations have been introduced to the voices of the disc, we know that the statements during the recording of an album ever have to correspond to reality.
For example, the letter dreamy "Ocean Grown" adds an optimistic point to the song yet, so between that and the rhythm, no less joy: Perhaps the location of Ocean Grown, closing the tracklist of Helplessness Blues, which is better to operate such a theme, rather than separately with a video recording of the album:
If the title song of the album look good, do not know if I can say the same about this "Ocean Grown." When you hear the start of the topic giddy and happy, waiting for the first explosion outside the melancholy of Fleet Foxes, but the band takes off his self-imposed straitjacket. In Helplessness Blues will not expand, unless last-minute surprise, his palette of sounds.
As demonstrated by "Ocean Grown", the Seattle band remains true to its folk, here's something more akin to the baroque style of Sufjan Stevens (look at those wind arrangements there as a cushion for the topic). Is to discover whether what they said about the new album would be "less and less cheerful pop" and finally, if no alterations have been introduced to the voices of the disc, we know that the statements during the recording of an album ever have to correspond to reality.
For example, the letter dreamy "Ocean Grown" adds an optimistic point to the song yet, so between that and the rhythm, no less joy: Perhaps the location of Ocean Grown, closing the tracklist of Helplessness Blues, which is better to operate such a theme, rather than separately with a video recording of the album:
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