| Transatlanticism |  | Artist: Death Cab For Cutie Label: Munich Category: Music
List Price: £9.99 Buy New: £6.07 You Save: £3.92 (39%)
New (5) from £6.07
Rating: 16 reviews Sales Rank: 110307
Format: Import Media: Audio CD Discs: 1
UPC: 742451024623 EAN: 0742451024623 ASIN: B00013KLFA
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: READY TO DESPATCH IN 2-3 BUSINESS DAYS, NEW ITEM
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| Tracks:
| • | New Year | | • | Lightness | | • | Title and Registration | | • | Expo '86 | | • | Sound of Settling | | • | Tiny Vessels | | • | Transatlanticism | | • | Passenger Seat | | • | Death of an Interior Decorator | | • | We Looked Like Giants | | • | Lack of Color |
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| Customer Reviews: Read 11 more reviews...
Rewarding Album June 24, 2007 M. W. Baldwin (Manchester) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm a big fan of Death Cab and i think this is perhaps my favourite album because it is one of those that get better the more you listen to it. Often tracks do not instantly grab you like the songs on albums such as Plans, but if you're looking to really sit back and listen a bit more I would recommend this album. A perfect example is the title track which, at over 7 minutes long, builds up and drops down throughout the song to create an atmosphere and mood that just can't be done in 3-4 minutes. Infact it's probably my favourite track. As i say, if you're looking for more instantly accessible Death Cab tracks i would recommend Plans, which is also a brilliant album. But this is an absolutley brilliant album in its own right.
Initially Beguiling, Ultimately Fulfilling March 30, 2007 Mr. P. A. Brown (Cheltenham, England) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Approaching an album like 'Transatlanticism' subjectively is difficult. Given the iconically cult nature, not only of the album, but also of the band themselves, it is impossible to approach this record without an exciting tingle of anticipation. Having grown to appreciate the bittersweet subtleties of their most recent album 'Plans', I was preparing for an experience that delivered such melancholic beauty, but in a more emotively powerful and ungoverned manner. With such a high level of anticipation, it was almost inevitable that my first reaction would be one of vague disappointment. Their were occassional highlights such as the exlosive thundering of opening track 'New Year'. Indeed the opening lyrics were very promising as they declared "So this is the New Year/And I don't feel any different". This fitted in with my own personal belief about the falseness of New Year as a time of seemingly instant change. Similarly the florescent bubbling of 'Sound of Settling', and its irreverent chorus of "Bah bah/This is the sound of settling/Bah bah, bah bah" made a positive impression upon my mind. But the rest of the album just seemed to slide by. Very few tracks distinguished themselves and towards the end I began to fear that 'Transatlanticism's' reputation was merely an insubstantial smokescreen. That was, however, until I reached the final track 'A Lack of Colour'. Anyone with a penchant for the lonesome combination of a soulful singer and his acoustic guitar cannot fail to be struck by the heartfelt simplicity of this song. While it gradually introduces dual vocals and a light bean-shaker beat, there is still the sense that frontman Ben Gibbard has complete seclusion. Indeed the occasional wave sound effects make it seem as if he is marooned on a desert island somewhere. The metaphorical nature of this presentation is obvious, both from the song's title, and its lyrics. Portraying a guy whoose life has become colourless without love, Gibbard realises that "All the girls in every girly magazine/Can't make me feel/Any less alone". Through lack of affection, Gibbard's loneliness is now irretrievable, as he admits "But I know it's too late/And I should have given you a reason to stay". The intelligent simplicity of such lyrical combinations are a joy to hear, and indeed mark Death Cab apart from so many other indie bands of their ilk. Indeed it is this slow burning, lyrically driven, vulnerably emotive kind of track that reawakens one's realisation about the true musical nature of Death Cab for Cutie. As with previously mentioned tracks 'New Year' and 'Sound of Settling'(both released as singles) the band are perfectly capable of creating powerful, distinctive and catchy tracks. However their true quality lies in their more subtle and less imposing songs. After a short time tracks like 'Lightness', 'Tiny Vessels' and 'Passenger Seat' begin to reveal their full beauty, seeming to slide softly into one's consciousness. The latter does so through the use of soft piano touches accompanied with a barely perceptible, swirling sound effect and Gibbard's naturally innocent vocal style. From this point on a waterfall effect occurs, as songs begin to tumble into one's mind, realising their full potential in the process. Tracks such as 'Expo 86' and 'We Looked Like Giants' now have a forceible impact seemingly missing on the inital listen through. The former is vaguely reminiscent of Jeff Buckley's 'So Real', with its quirky and chaotic translation from catchy melody to thumping chorus, and back again. In 'We Looked Like Giants' the rhythm section of newly employed drummer Jason McGerr and long-time bassist Nicholas Harmer really pulsates through. With rough drum patterns and a humming bass, this song finally delivers some of the rawness that I had initially anticipated. By this point it became difficult to find a track that I couldn't enthuse over, with every one displaying both lyrically and musically a talent which I had now become fully aware of. There are many albums I have initally found disappointing. Some have had to hold my interest with one or two songs in order to let me develop a liking for them. In many cases this developement has occured, and the album has become important to me. Indeed I would suggest that this is quite a universal principle. The encounter of something new and different is often treated with caution. Given enough listens most albums will gradually become acceptable, if not fairly valuable to the majority of listeners. However, the manner in which 'Transatlanticism' drags itself from largely uninspiring to near perfection is nothing short of miraculous. Its cult reputation is thoroughly deserved and its transformation from the passable to the classic is a journey that every true music fan should take.
One of my favourite ever albums! December 13, 2006 GS Minhas (London - UK) 2 out of 7 found this review helpful
There are not many CDs you can buy that have so many good songs on it, they'll have a one or two that you recognise and like and the rest of it is really... rubbish, but not this second album from Death Cab For Cutie! Each song is great, this is more of a chilled out album albeit a one or two tracks. My personal favourites are The Sound of Settling, Tiny Vessels, Lightness, Transalanticism, A Lack of Color. But the rest of it is awesome, you can play this CD without skipping a track. Transalanctism is the first of their stuff I have listened to, I'm now getting into their first albums 'Plans'. I would highly recommend this album to any rock/indie fan.
Transatlanticism November 10, 2006 Mr. Ralph Darvill (UK) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I can't give five stars as there are some weaker moments in this album, but overall it is a great and varied collection of songs. It was my first "Death Cab" purchase, and from the first chord of The New Year I was grinning from ear to ear (in the same way as when I first heard The Bends by Radiohead), it's such a great song. From here on in it is a fairly eclectic journey as the band are neither musically or lyrically cliched in any way and are by no means just another "emo" band. By the time you reach Tiny Vessels, you had better have a spare twenty minutes uninterrupted as you won't want to be disturbed through the last group of songs, it segues beautifully into the title song with it's impassioned vocal, then into Passenger Seat which will transport you back to the days of childhood and riding in a car feeling small down in the passenger seat and watching the world go by... Death of an Interior Decorator is a wry look at marital breakdown and is followed by the mighty We Looked like Giants and the melancholic a Lack of Colour. I heartily recommend this album.
Death Cab's album June 13, 2006 NatRocks 1 out of 24 found this review helpful
The only standout track from this album is, or would have to be 'A lack of colour', a melodious, melancholy tune to please the auditory senses. I have listened to other tracks on the album - but found them not to be of my taste. They all spark a very melancholy feel - the typical 'emo' band. Many tracks are average-good. I would recommend this album if you enjoyed Death Cab's other material - it will be to your taste. It just isn't to mine. If you have heard their other tunes and disliked any of that music - it is likely that you won't enjoy the majority of this music. However, it deserves credit for the music - it's very good but just not for me. I would recommend Rooney and Keane!
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