All Your Summer Songs Saturday Looks Good to Me

BUY THIS ITEM

  • $11.99 List price
    $10.19 Online price
    (Save 15%)
    $9.17 Member price
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=644110006028&productCode=MU&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

CD

  • Release Date: 03/18/2003
  • Sales Rank: 82,777
  • Label: POLYVINYL RECORDS
  • UPC: 644110006028
More Formats 
Vinyl LP - Bonus Tracks$11.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

All Your Summer Songs

1LISTEN[Untitled Track] 1:42
2LISTENMeet Me by the Water 2:58
3LISTENUnderwater Heartbeat 1:56
4LISTENAmbulance 2:50
5LISTENThe Sun Doesn't Want to Shine 3:43
6LISTENCaught 2:06
7LISTENAll Our Summer Songs 4:27
8LISTENNo Good With Secrets 3:19
9LISTENAlcohol 2:09
10LISTENYou Work All Weekend 2:59
11LISTENTyping 3:29
12LISTENUltimate Stars 3:03
13LISTENLast Hour 4:24

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Even though the largely emo-based Polyvinyl Records doesn't seem like the most natural home for Saturday Looks Good to Me's winsome, nostalgic pop, the undeniable emotional pull and heartfelt delivery of Fred Thomas and company's music makes it a better fit than one might expect. All Your Summer Songs, the group's fifth album and Polyvinyl debut, is another triumph, expressing the complexities of being in and out of love with deceptively naïve music and lyrics that are wise beyond their years. While Motown, Phil Spector, and the Beach Boys still exert a strong influence on Saturday Looks Good to Me's sound -- especially on "Alcohol" and "Ultimate Stars" -- the band explores an entire bandwidth of AM radio moments, ranging from the "Itchycoo Park" drum fills on "Meet Me by the Water"; the Peter & Gordon-esque acoustic guitars on "No Good with Secrets"; and the Byrdsy jangle of "You Work All Weekend," which sounds like said band backing the Magnetic Fields' Stephin Merritt. And while Thomas has as much reverence for -- not to mention ability to create -- a perfectly written two-and-a-half-minute pop song as Merritt does, his music sounds fresher and less contrived despite its retro allusions. Indeed, aside from pleasing record collectors and oldies geeks, the reconfiguration of sounds past that makes up Saturday Looks Good to Me's style gives their music a timeless yet fresh feel that also has an instant familiarity. "Caught" and "Typing" (which also includes the priceless lyric "You spent such a long time typing/That you forgot how to write letters") are twinkling pop confections ready for cameos on the soundtrack to a Wes Anderson movie, while "Underwater Heartbeat" casts singer Erika Hoffmann as a lovelorn mermaid. Along with Hoffmann, All Your Summer Songs also features indie luminaries and long-time SLGTM auxiliary members like Ted Leo, Dan Littleton, Matthew Smith, Karla Schickele, and Jessica Bailiff, although Thomas himself sings the album's most painfully intimate songs, such as "The Sun Doesn't Want to Shine" and the title track's slow-motion breakup lament. Even so, a wistful feeling pervades even the album's most upbeat moments; songs that start out bright and bouncy often end with a sigh. Sonically, the album is slightly more polished than the band's earlier works, but not by much; though "Ambulance," one of their best songs, appears in a cleaner, lusher version here, the album was still recorded mostly on four-track and still features the abrupt starts and stops and interludes that give the group's work a dreamy, stream-of-consciousness feel. Ultimately, All Your Summer Songs is quintessential Saturday Looks Good to Me, which should delight old and new fans of the band alike. Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

All Your Summer Songsby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

January 18, 2006: This album is incredible, and the best one I've picked up in the past two years. I suppose you could make the argument that everything they're doing has been done before, but this trumps almost every predecessor where emotional pull is concerned. The lyrics are more than surface level, yet very accessible and easy to relate to. This album is beautiful and if you ever see it sitting in some CD shop, fork over the cash to pick it up - it sort of means more that way, it's tangible, something you can hold onto that captures a feeling and a time in life. Yeah, it's one of those albums.