You & Me The Walkmen

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CD

  • Release Date: 08/19/2008
  • Sales Rank: 27,582
  • Label: GIGANTIC
  • UPC: 675650001723
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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You & Me

1LISTENDónde Está La Playa 3:55
2LISTENFlamingos 1:10
3LISTENOn the Water 3:09
4LISTENIn the New Year 4:22
5LISTENSeven Years of Holidays 3:39
6LISTENPostcards from Tiny Islands 4:03
7LISTENRed Moon 4:02
8LISTENCanadian Girl 4:04
9LISTENFour Provinces 4:02
10LISTENLong Time Ahead of Us 3:47
11LISTENThe Blue Route 4:26
12LISTENNew Country 3:44
13LISTENI Lost You 3:31
14LISTENIf Only It Were True 3:07

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The Walkmen took a working holiday from their usual sound on their remake of Harry Nilsson's Pussy Cats and, to a lesser extent, on the Dylan-goes-Latin vibe of A Hundred Miles Off, but they return to more familiar territory on You & Me. Quite literally, too: the band revisited the same studio where they laid down Bows + Arrows for some of this album's sessions. However, travel is one of You & Me's major themes, with beaches, holidays, and provinces placing these songs all over the map. That plays perfectly into the Walkmen's uncanny ability to conjure specific places in their music: "Donde Esta La Playa," from its turista title to its deconstructed surf guitars to lyrics like "there is still sand in my suitcase/there is still salt in my teeth," plays like blurry but vivid memories -- and proof that not everything that happens on vacation stays on vacation. Grotto-like reverb gives "Postcards from Tiny Islands"' riotous guitars a nostalgic twinge only heightened by small but telling details like "the bar band and their sorry songs." The Walkmen also travel through different sounds on You & Me: "Red Moon"'s gentle acoustic guitars and brass give it a subtly Latin feel, while "Canadian Girl"'s dreamy warmth suggests a vintage soul single that's been tucked away for decades in a forgotten jukebox. You & Me's return to the Walkmen's usual shadowy, introspective moodiness feels like a cloud covering the sun, especially after the drunken wake of Pussy Cats. Fortunately, that cloudiness suits these songs, particularly "On the Water," a darkly pretty ballad lit by faintly shimmering keyboards, and "In the New Year," which sets a bruised melody to jubilant organ swells that only sound more poignant together. Despite a few louder moments like "Seven Years of Holidays (For Stretch)"'s shambling waltz and "Blue Route"'s gut-punching drums, You & Me delves deeply into the evocative ballads that have made the band fascinating since Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone. The album closes with a trio of them, with the spare jangle of "New Country" and "If Only It Were True"'s final declaration "I'll die in dreams of you" ending You & Me on a somberly sweet note. This may or may not be the Walkmen's prettiest album, but it's certainly their loneliest. Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

You & Meby Anonymous

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August 17, 2008: As indie music begins to boil over, you would expect bands to get stale and predictable. Fortunately, this is not the case for the Walkmen. You &amp Me shows the band taking a bold step in a new direction, yet they still manage to not stray too far from their signature sound. The songs on this ablum are very well crafted works of art, each sound sounding very unique from one another. The guitar on this album is very subtle yet stands out a lot in the recordings. The drums are more subdued on this record, but that's not a bad thing, if he had played the same way he played on a record like Bows Arrows it would have been a complete disaster. Honestly, I like the quit drums, it really helps to allow the songs build up and go somewhere. The keyboards are very low in the mix but they provide a lot of texture. The bass on this album is awesome, very melodic and smooth. Vocal melodies can be a bit lazy at times, that is my one complaint with this record, but the lyrics have had a huge improvement! He really did a great job of stepping outside his lyrical comfort zones and it totally paid off. You &amp Me has a great flow and vibe, it's definitely a start to finish album. I prefer to listen to this album at night while taking a long drive, but I could listen to it in any circumstance at any time of day. If I had to rank this album among the Walkmen's previous releases, I would put it in second place right below Everyone Who Pretended to Like Me Is Gone. So get excited to hear this record and definitely make it a priority to catch these guys live when they stop in your town. Enjoy it and Support it.