Plans Death Cab for Cutie

NEW FROM BN.COM
  • $18.99 List price
    $15.38 Online Price
    (You Save 19%)
  • skip to cart

SPEND $25, GET FREE SHIPPING

Pick Me Up

Want to reserve & pick up at your local store?

  • Enter your zip

CD

Average Customer Rating:

( 38 customer ratings )

  • Release Date: 08/30/2005
  • Sales Rank: 24,696
  • Label: Atlantic
  • UPC: 075678383427

Customers who bought this also bought

 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

Overview -

Plans

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Death Cab for Cutie have been one of the slowest-percolating overnight success stories to hit the rock world in recent memory. The Seattleites' nearly decade-long slog through the indie-rock ranks -- assisted in no small way by frequent namechecks and a live performance on Fox's hit dramedy The O.C. -- culminates in a sudden uptick in mainstream profile on this major-label bow. The leap to more rarified company hasn't much changed frontman Ben Gibbard's worldview -- on the typically stark "What Sarah Said," he ponders sitting in a hospital room watching a loved one die slowly -- but it has made quite an impact on Death Cab's sound. At once more spare and more slick than their past outings, Plans is a definite throwback album, reminiscent of mid-'70s singer-songwriter discs on which piano and empty space were the primary coloring tools -- particularly on songs like the painstakingly denuded "Summer Skin" and the achingly deliberate "Brothers on a Hotel Bed." The instrumental palette does open up here and there, with organ flourishes propelling "The Marching Bands of Manhattan" and Flaming Lips–worthy kitchen-sink psychedelia draping "Your Heart Is an Empty Room." But at its core, Plans is more conspiratorial than anthemic; one gets the sense that Gibbard would just as soon whisper his confessions into listeners' ears one at a time as air them on a stage. That intimacy not only makes Plans easy on the ears, it gives it an immediacy that's hard to resist. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



More Reviews and Recommendations

Customer Reviews

Great Albumby Anonymous

Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

September 27, 2010: I like this album

Where music meets the soul.by Anonymous

Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

September 27, 2010: Quite possibly one of the greatest and most poetic bands that i have had the privilage of listening to originally was passed over for an equally great artist. But upon further listening to tracks like "soul meets body" and "Follow you into the Dark" the genious of Death Cab came shining through. It was the clever use of metaphors, the lush arrangements, and the always hesitant, but assured vocals that first caught my attention. The album is a breeding ground for some of the most beautiful landscapes of aural exploration and emotional contemplation i have ever heard. The genious lies not in the songs individual complexity, but in the simplicity and raw emotion that cant be easily duplicated. This album is an adventure in self discovery, emotional longing, and a quest to understand the complexities of life, death, and all that there is in between. A must listen.


More Customer Reviews