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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful floating pop rock
When I picked up this album today, I had never heard of this group, let alone heard any of their music. But I'm glad I got this album! This music is right down my line.

What I hear in the music is a blend of psychedelia, 80s pop, and lots of that wonderful early 90s music that I call "brightwave," but I guess the common term is shoegazer--music like Cocteau...
Published on July 7, 2006 by J Lee Harshbarger

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Looking at my Feet
(Okay. My self-imposed goal with this Asobi Seksu album is to write a fair and solid review without giving-in to the temptation to fill the page with My Bloody Valentine comparisons. I mean, yea, Asobi Seksu do employ that wall of sound reverb that My Bloody Valentine perfected 20 years prior. And yes, Kevin Shield's band was among the seminal acts of the genre. But...
Published on July 14, 2007 by Richie Corelli


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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful floating pop rock, July 7, 2006
By 
J Lee Harshbarger (Ypsilanti, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
When I picked up this album today, I had never heard of this group, let alone heard any of their music. But I'm glad I got this album! This music is right down my line.

What I hear in the music is a blend of psychedelia, 80s pop, and lots of that wonderful early 90s music that I call "brightwave," but I guess the common term is shoegazer--music like Cocteau Twins, Autumn's Grey Solace, or Lush.

"Exotic Animal Paradise" and "Red Sea" remind me the most of Cocteau Twins, their shimmering, floating sound that I associate with big ocean waves and peaceful summer days. "Red Sea" has a big sound grand ending. "Thursday" also has some of this sound at the end, but with more of a feel-good pop flavor.

Songs such as "New Years," "Goodbye," and "Mizu Asobi" have a sound that reminds me of cheerful, quirky 80s new wave pop, where I hear occasional touches of Blondie, glitzed up with fuzzed-out, psychedelia guitars. In some songs, such as "Strings" and "Pink Cloud Tracing Paper," I hear traces of mid-80s New Order influence.

The songs are sung in a mixture of English and Japanese, with all the tracks but one featuring a female vocalist. There's not a song on here I don't like. This is quintessential summer music for me, and I expect to be listening to this a lot the remainder of this summer.

March 2007 Update: I originally reviewed the day I got it in summer 2006. Amazon's system doesn't permit changing of stars, but if I could, I would change this to 5 stars. There was no album in 2006 whose music I liked better than this one. The music is so beautiful that it deeply moves me.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars outstanding album!, September 18, 2006
By 
M. Lohrke (Saratoga Springs, UT) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
whenever a new bands surfaces and mines old territory, the naysayers inevitably appear and begin to knock down the current in favor of the past. not only is comparing the present to past generally unfair and shortsighted, it's also amounts to a display on narrow-mindedness. no, asobi seksu aren't my bloody valentine, slowdive, ride, swervedriver, or any number of other shoegazer bands. shoegazing hit its peak nearly 15 years ago. those who hold on to as though it were some holy grail do themselves a disservice by refusing to properly acknowledge a band who has nothing but love for the aforementioned band.

asobi seksu, a nyc quarted, is a crazily fantastic band. sure, the elements of shoegazing are there, name in the swirling, kaleidoscopic guitars and yuki's occasional elizabeth-frasier-esque vocals tics. but yuki owes more of debt to harriet wheeler than elizabeth frasier. asobi seksu is everything that's right about great pop/rock music. tight, effecient songs, effortless melodies, intricate and interesting musicianship, and enough energy to light a city for weeks. if it seems that asobi seksu is a highly calculated band, nothing could be futher from the truth.

through they do mine familiar shoegazer territory, asobi seksu is a highly orginal and exciting band. the first 1/2 of the album is as good as anything i've heard in a LONG time (and i listen to a lot of music). the one-two punch of 'new years' and 'thursday' is as great as anything you'll hear this year. both are heavy, exciting, i dare say thrilling, tracks. the choruses, particularly 'thursday,' are spine chilling.

sure, asobi seksu will make you a bit nostalgic for the days of mbv and slowdive, but they'll also make you excited about the future of music. with a soundtrack like this, how can life be anything but beautiful and wonderful? a really remarkable album.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Citrus, October 7, 2008
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This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
On their second LP, Citrus, Asobi Seksu sound like a band that has come into their own. The songwriting on Citrus far outclasses the work on their self-titled debut, with tracks like "Thursday" and "Goodbye" standing as some of the best tracks of 2006. Stylistically, the album is at times both more and less shoegazy than their debut. Tracks like "Pink Cloud Tracing Paper" and "Red Sea" sound like they would belong on a Slowdive record, whereas the aforementioned "Goodbye" is more of an alternative power-pop track, managing to be both playful and smart. There isn't really a single track on this record that isn't worth its weight, and the sequencing is exciting and well planned.

Ultimately, for any fan of shoegaze, alternative pop, or luscious female vocals, Citrus is a must-have. And, for any fan that enjoys this record, definitely check out their debut, which is a competent, if not quite as dynamic, record. Definitely one of the best of 2006.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Looking at my Feet, July 14, 2007
This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
(Okay. My self-imposed goal with this Asobi Seksu album is to write a fair and solid review without giving-in to the temptation to fill the page with My Bloody Valentine comparisons. I mean, yea, Asobi Seksu do employ that wall of sound reverb that My Bloody Valentine perfected 20 years prior. And yes, Kevin Shield's band was among the seminal acts of the genre. But Asobi Seksu move beyond their influences and infuse themselves into most of the songs on this album. A detailed comparison of the two bands would be unfair to each).

Asobi Seksu is a shoegazey quartet from New York. The songs on Citrus, their second album, balance fuzzy guitar noise, keyboard washes, and infectious melodies. The guitar of James Hana establishes and frames most of the songs while the work of singer/keyboardist Yuki Chikudate makes the band distinct. Chikudate's girlishly cute singing, which alternates from Japanese to English, provide the hookiest moments on the album. She is not perfect. There are a few instances where the vocals detract; the off-key chorus yelped during "Strings" damages the otherwise perfect song and "Goodbye" suffers from an awkward transition between verses. But the bulk of the music is led by Chikudate's ethereal charm.

Of the 12 tracks on the album, "Thursday" is the strongest. Poppy vocals and steady beats slide over building strings and feedback. At well-positioned points throughout the song, the lush chorus fades to heighten the more atmospheric elements of the track. During these segments, a guitar and keyboard play off of each other and set up for the next change. The song's finale is marked with a deep barrage of sound and two vocalists, male and female, pushing their chords into the fray.

Another highlight is "Nefi and Girly." With its psychedelic guitar intro, bouncing beats, and punching vocals, this track borrows a bit of sound from the Stone Roses. The rhythm jumps and the guitar bends alongside of catchy vocals and contagious hooks. "Nefi and Girly," continuously sets itself up for points of erupting distortion. These blasts of sound intersect with the track's lighter instances and create a push-pull dynamic that makes the song as intricate much as it is poppy.

It is a pattern that is repeated on many songs throughout Citrus. Often, it works very well. On "Exotic Animal Paradise," however, it is less successful. The song lags for a full 2 minutes and 47 seconds, repeating itself in an empty, generic fashion, until an explosion of distortion rips through the speakers. The outburst is skillfully executed, but the transition from the first movement of the song is clumsy. It sounds less like the song's climax, and more like another track altogether.

Still, such cases are rare and, in general, the band has put together a solid album. Asobi Seksu is, at points, derivate of My Bloody Valentine. (Well... I tried). They recycle some already established genre staples, but they do so with flair, solid songwriting, and personal reinterpretations. Instrumentation builds up, drops out, and reprises with the moments of thick sound punctuated by falling emptiness. The band shifts enough sounds throughout the album to keep each of the tracks separate from one another while allowing enough common noises to suture the different songs into one cohesive album. Citrus proves that good shoegaze did not die in 1991.


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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Liked Lost in Translation? Check this Out, January 12, 2007
By 
Bec "bec16" (Alexandria, VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
I couldn't care less about how you categorize this album in musical terms, who it sounds like, or doesn't - all I know is, if you liked the atmospheric sounds in the movie Lost in Translation, you'll probably like this. It IS great music to work to, as someone else wrote, and it's also great to take a long, mellow walk with. Some music *changes* your mood, but some is better served as a soundtrack *for* your mood. Just enjoy it.



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5.0 out of 5 stars Shoegazer at its best, September 21, 2009
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This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
Honestly, I've never heard of this group till last week. Normally I would not like what is categorized as 'shoegazer' much less listening to weird name sounding group
such as Asobi Seksu. Anyway, my nephew asked me to fix his messed up Ipod and by chance I just stumbled into this great CD while testing the unit.

Start from the second track, the sounds came in crashing till you feel all tingly, blissfully totally emerged in its cocoon like surrounding . Some songs are sung in Japanese, but I would not care what the heck the singer is singing about. I just enjoy this addictive, poppy swirling sounds which made my long commute much, much less bearable. This is definitely a joyful discovery for me this year . Asobi very much reminds me of Joy Division, with mix of Blondie and Billy Corgan - all are singing in incomprehensible Japanese verses .
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4.0 out of 5 stars 4.5 Dream, Cream, Tangerine, June 7, 2009
By 
This review is from: Citrus [Vinyl] (Vinyl)
I am surprised I like this as much as I do. It pretty much happenned straight away and it seems to be the one record I continue to play over and over. Yes, she borrows a lot from others and the obvious influence is MBV. I love all kinds of music but lately it is the dream pop and shoegazer stuff that I prefer. There is a dream quality and maybe a bit too happy for most shoegazers. The heavy 180 gram vinyl and the high quality artwork makes it a collectable. I don't see how she will ever be able to top the music on this record. I think she did just about as good a job as anyone could do with the genre, as artifice. It might take longer for others to get. Some may never. I love it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Add Some Citrus to Your Lush Sundays, April 29, 2009
This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
Shoegaze or nu-gaze. Dream pop or noise pop. Call it what you will, Asobi Seksu's swirly sounds and ethereal vocals will fit right into your iPod playlist somewhere between the best tracks of late-lamented 90s Brit bands such as Lush and The Sundays. The Harriet Wheeler/Sundays comparisons are most striking on standout track "Thursday" which leads straight into the delightfully Lush-like "Strings." Yuki Chikudate's distinctive vocals soar again on "Nefi + Girly." Citrus is definitely an album with zest.
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5.0 out of 5 stars I love this album, November 16, 2007
This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
I can't believe someone would give this album 1 star. I bought it today and I just cannot believe how good this is. My only concern is that I did not buy it earlier. It has the perfect balance between ethereal Cocteaus and grinding MBV style discordance. Those are the two reference points (yes, this New York band are as far from American alternative music as it is possible to get) but it pushes them in all sorts of interesting directions.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Brillant, Brillant brillant!, August 23, 2007
This review is from: Citrus (Audio CD)
frist off, how can any one give this album one star is an absoult mystory to me.

right from the off, the wall of noise hits you between the eyes like a tone of bricks.

this album is an absolute sensation to listen to, I have not been as excited by an album in a long time, this is just epic

sorry if my review seems like a rambling mess, but i cannot put in words just how good this is, album of 2007? at this moment is gonna take something very sepical indeed to knock for the top of the list.
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Citrus [Vinyl] by Asobi Seksu (Vinyl - 2008)
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