Fleet Foxes Fleet Foxes

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/03/2008
  • Sales Rank: 6,719
  • Label: SUB POP
  • UPC: 098787077728

Listener Rating: (28 ratings)

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CD$31.99
Vinyl LP$15.99

Note: Listen to a free stream of "White Winter Hymnal"

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Fleet Foxes

1LISTENSun It Rises 3:11
2LISTENWhite Winter Hymnal 2:27
3LISTENRagged Wood 5:07
4LISTENTiger Mountain Peasant Song 3:28
5LISTENQuiet Houses 3:32
6LISTENHe Doesn't Know Why 3:20
7LISTENHeard Them Stirring 3:02
8LISTENYour Protector 4:09
9LISTENMeadowlarks 3:11
10LISTENBlue Ridge Mountains 4:25
11LISTENOliver James 3:23

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Borrowing from ageless folk and classic rock (and nicking some of the best bits from prog and soft rock along the way), on their self-titled debut album Fleet Foxes don't just master the art of taking familiar influences and making them sound fresh again, they give a striking sense of who they are and what their world is like. Their song titles reference the Blue Ridge Mountains -- never mind that they're actually from Seattle -- but it's the ease and skill with which they mix and match British and American folk and rock from the far and not too distant past that makes the band's music so refreshing. While this mix could be contrived or indulgent, Fleet Foxes use restraint, structuring their flourishes into three- and four-minute pop songs full of chiming melodies and harmonies that sound like they've been summoned from centuries of traditional songs and are full of vivid, universal imagery: mountains, birds, family, death. Despite drawing from so many sources, there's a striking purity to Fleet Foxes' sound. Robin Pecknold's voice is warm and sweet, with just enough grit to make phrases like "premonition of my death" sound genuine, and the band's harmonies sound natural, and stunning, whether they're on their own or supported by acoustic guitars or the full, plugged-in band. "Tiger Mountain Peasant Song" and "Meadowlarks" show just how much the Foxes do with the simplest elements of their music, but Fleet Foxes' best songs marry that purity with twists that open their sound much wider. As good as the Sun Giant EP was, Fleet Foxes saved many of their best songs for this album. "White Winter Hymnal" is remarkably beautiful, building from a vocal round into glorious jangle pop with big, booming drums that lend a sense of adventure as the spine-tingling melody lightens some of the lyrics' darkness ("Michael you would fall and turn the white snow red as strawberries in summertime"). The suite-like "Ragged Wood" moves from a galloping beat to sparkling acoustic picking, then takes a trippy detour before returning to a more thoughtful version of its main theme. "Quiet Houses" and "He Doesn't Know Why"'s driving pianos show off the band's flair for drama. Dazzling songs like these are surrounded by a few songs that find the band leaning a little more heavily on its influences. "Your Protector" nods to Zeppelin's misty, mournful side, and "Blue Ridge Mountains" is the kind of earthy yet sophisticated song CSNY would have been proud to call their own. But, even when the songs aren't as brilliant as Fleet Foxes' highlights, the band still sounds alluring, as on the lush interlude "Heard Them Stirring." Throughout the album, the band sounds wise beyond its years, so it's not really that surprising that Fleet Foxes is such a satisfying, self-assured debut. Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

Brings me back to great music of the 60's and 70's acoustics.by SharanWI

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October 04, 2009: I heard the group on SNL or another late show and the music drew me to the TV to actually listen. I'd missed this genre for years, It was refreshing, I just miss the lyrics sheet in the CD.

Wonderfully Confident & Hauntingby HungryForAWalk

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September 29, 2009: Just in writing this review I am in over my head - yet I can't help but comment on this incredible album. My understanding is that this is Fleet Foxes freshman album which makes the album absolutely remarkable. As a band they exhibit confidence and greatness that is honest and easy. This is not Icarus flying too high on a fledgling flight - over extending. It is natural and appropriately and wonderfully confident and haunting.

As you listen to this album - which is at the same time contemporary while deeply reminiscent of some of the best of the 70's rock - you can't helped to be absorbed in it. As you soon find out the album is full of beautifully harmonized vocals that tell story and not simply sentiment. Add to this instrumentation that constantly serves a purpose providing big sound when needed and reverent starkness at times - reminiscent of a that important someone in your past who spoke when there was something of value to say and remained refreshingly quiet when it was time to refrain from words - this alone is a quality in friendships and in music that is all too often lost in our incessantly narcissistic age.

Rather than a few singles worth mentioning that encourage a person to i-buy piecemeal, this is truly and album worthy of being an album. Each track gives a worthy hunger for the next. Finally, back to their freshman status - one gets the sense of age and maturity in their music that can hardly be improved upon by mere practice and theatrical longevity in the music making business. Rather, there is something very natural, passionate, deep,elemental,and wonderfully 'old' about their sound. I for one am very hungry for more.


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