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Ocean Eyes

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Ocean EyesArtist: Owl City
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Tracklisting:

1. Cave In
2. The Bird and The Worm
3. Hello Seattle
4. Umbrella Beach
5. The Saltwater Room
6. Dental Care
7. Meteor Shower
8. On The Wing
9. Fireflies
10. The Tip Of The Iceberg
11. Vanilla Twilight
12. Tidal Wave

Product Details:

   Release Date: 28 July 2009
   Record Label: Republic
   Rating:
   Sales Rank: 540

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 Custom Stores > Indie Music > Dance & DJ > Electronica
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Customer Reviews:

  Great CD (24 August 2010)
This is apparently my grandson's favorite cd. I ordered it while they were staying with me this summer. The music is very fun and bouncy. I enjoy it myself. The shipping was quick and saved us in the car on our way back and forth to visit friends and family members. The CD came in perfect condition. Thanks!

  Adam Young's innocence and overwhelming optimism is a breath of fresh air in today's music industry (20 August 2010)
The sensation known as Owl City began in the bedroom of Adam Young, who writes and composes music when dealing with insomnia. He release two albums on his own before being picked up by a label for his "official" debut. He has received much praise and much ridicule for his massively popular hit Fireflies, but here we will examine whether that praise/scorn is deserved. Below is a track by track review of the album, or you can skip down to the conclusion at the end of this review.

1. Cave In - 10/10 - A great start to the album, this song can't really be put into a category of being hard or soft, as it is, at times, both. The song starts out with a strong electronica-style beat, then mellows out with synthesizer and strings in the body of the song, then builds up to the driving beat again at the end. Some of the album's most bizarre lyrics can be found here ["Swallow a drop of gravel and blacktop, cuz the road tastes like wintergreen"] but, overall, the song is still optimistic in its own odd way ["When the bombs go off, the sun will still be shining, because I've heard said that every mushroom cloud has a silver lining"].
2. The Bird and the Worm - 9.5/10 - The first love song on the album, this track is more pop-guitar ballad than electronica but still a welcome addition to the CD. Half a point is taken off solely because of some slightly disturbing imagery at the start that may surprise some listeners ["...I'm the worm... if my segments get separated I'll scream, you'll be there"].
3. Hello Seattle - 10/10 - This is the second version of Hello Seattle to be released, the previous being on Owl City's first CD, Of June, and the succeeding release being a remix on the Deluxe Edition of Ocean Eyes. Consisting of many complex layers of beats and sounds, this revamped version of Hello Seattle showcases some of Adam Young's best work. Again, you won't be able to make much sense of the lyrics ["Hello Seattle, I am a mountaineer, on the hills and highlands, I fall asleep in hospital parking lots and awake in your mouth"], but overall this is an expertly produced track that easily becomes addictive.
4. Umbrella Beach - 10/10 - This track fits more into the dance category than electronics; it's an easy one to get your foot tapping to. Contains some interesting implementations of strings that flows quite well with the synthesizer. Another very well done song that will just lift you up from whatever's troubling you.
5. The Saltwater Room - 9/10 - Another song that is seeing a facelift after previously being released, this one originally came from Owl City's second album, Maybe I'm Dreaming. This song features touching lyrics about love ["Our time together is never quite enough, when you and I are alone, I've never felt so at home, what will it take to make or break this hint of love, only time"], yet some fans might get bored with this song, as it is slower than most of the rest of the album. Another aspect avid Owl City fans will notice is that Young changed some of the lyrics in the verses from the first version.
6. Dental Care - 10/10 - I don't care what anybody else says, I think this song has some of the most clever lyrics of any song I've heard. Some have complained about how they don't want to hear a song that's literally about going to the dentist, but if you take a listen, you can't help but be drawn in with Adam Young's happy, bouncy innocence as he chronicles a trip to the dreaded office ["I've been to the dentist a thousand times, so I know the drill, I smooth my hair, sit back in the chair, but somehow I still get the chills"]. There's also some witty double-entendres (not to be confused with a sexual double-entendre) that showcase Young's poetic genius ["When hygienists leave on long vacations, that's when dentists scream and lose their patience/patients"].
7. Meteor Shower - 9/10 - A short song, Meteor Shower has only two full lines of lyric ["I am not my own, for I have been made new, please don't let me go, I desperately need you"], while the rest of the song is light electronics. For what it's worth, the lyrics are strikingly similar to a verse in the Bible.
8. On the Wing - 10/10 - This is the third and final song that was taken from a previous album and revamped. Perhaps one of my favorites, this track reflects on a short romance "[Below the northern lights I spend my coldest nights, alone, awake and thinking of the weekend we were in love"]. The effective combination of strings and synthesizer, along with complex beats, make this song riveting, and Adam's duet with his female vocalist at the end of the song makes one long for this romance that is reflected upon in this song.
9. Fireflies - 10/10 - Undoubtedly the most popular song ever released by Owl City, you probably have already heard this track (if you haven't and just so happened to stumble upon this album, you are in a quickly shrinking minority). You either love it or you hate it, but if you hate it I can't imagine why you're reading this review. This song also has a knack for being surprisingly addictive, with it's lyrics about getting ["...a thousand hugs from ten thousand lightening bugs"] and getting ["misty eyes as they said farewell"]. Almost inexplicably, the song is very uplifting and positive, although there doesn't seem to be a lot of obviously uplifting content in the lyrics, save the ending ["I'd like to make myself believe that planet earth turns slowly, it's hard to say that I'd rather stay awake when I'm asleep because my dreams are bursting at the seams."]
10. Tip of the Iceberg - 10/10 - At this point, the album starts to taper off, not in quality of lyrics or sound, but in intensity and speed. Tip of the Iceberg has the qualities of slower electronica (although it does pick up towards the end) and has the same unpredictability that Owl City is so well known for ["Peer over the edge, can you see me? Rivulets flow from your eyes, paint runs from your mouth like a waterfall, and your lungs crystallize"].
11. Vanilla Twilight - 9.5/10 - This song is a sweet love song in which the lover yearns to be reunited with his lover, but promises he will always remember her even if they don't ["I'll forget the world that I knew, but swear I won't forget you, my voice will reach back to the past and whisper in your ear, Oh, darling I wish you were here"]. Young uses a combination of piano and soft electronics to effectively communicate the emotion involved in the song.
12. Tidal Wave - 8.5/10 - The last song on Ocean Eyes features vocals from Relient K frontrunner Matt Thiessen. While not pushed in any of his songs, Young's Christian faith is most obvious here ["I was given grace and love, I was blind but now I can see, cuz I've found a new hope from above, and courage swept over me"]. The sound of the song is a bit underwhelming for an effective close, but still a fine song.

Some have complained that Owl City's vocals are subpar due to an "overuse" of Auto-Tune. While it is obvious that the program is used in his songs, it is used more as a creative tool than a coverup for bad vocals. In closing, I must say that Young clearly has an enormous amount of talent and genius that he has poured into his work. Thus far, he's maintained an innocence that is virtually impossible to find in the music world. One can only hope that his next release will maintain that positivity.

  My Happy Music (30 July 2010)
Great album! I discovered Owl City a few months back. Adam Young's music has a youthful joy that I just love. Something we could use more of in this world! His musical style is fun, artistic, interesting, and soothing. His lyrics wander wonderfully through the happy, the silly, and the thoughtful. At first the lyrics seemed entertainingly random. As I listened more, I loved picking up on the plays on words and discovering what the songs are really about. This music makes me happy. I hope to buy his older albums soon, and anxiously await the next!

  Electro-bubblegum (21 July 2010)
A surprise internet sensation, Adam Young, aka Owl City, assaults the listener's senses with his unadulateratedly chirpy, electro-bubblegum synthpop. With lyrics about a dentist's chair, and getting a sunburn, set against his sunshiney tunes, Young stays clear of getting too philosphical or angsty like his contemporaries. His vocals aren't the strongest either, and tends to be rather reedy, which can threaten to grate when he does that earnest slide-up-the-notes whine on some tracks.

However, all in all, it's hard to resist such an enthusiastically fun set of tunes, and Owl City's appeal is that it doesn't try too hard or take itself too seriously. Of course, with hooks aplenty in the smash hit 'Fireflies' and album opener 'Cave In', it's easy to soak this album up without apology.

It'll be interesting to see how Adam Young follows up this album, especially when he is reported to be working on under a whole different band/persona with a set of tunes that are more acoustic.

  OK (13 July 2010)
The CD was delieverd quickly and without damage, however I'm not so crazy for the sound...a chance I took but service was great!

 


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