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Dear John

Loney DearAudio CD
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

Price: $7.99 & FREE Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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MP3 Music, 11 Songs, 2012 $9.49  
Audio CD, 2012 $7.99  
Vinyl, 2009 $18.42  

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Biography

Hailing from the small city of Jonkoping, Sweden, Loney Dear's primary member Emil Svanängen first began recording homemade, overdubbed tapes of delicate, folkish indie pop in the early 2000s. As Loney, Dear (the band has since deleted the comma from its name), Svanängen self-released three homemade CD-Rs through his website: River Fontana Redux, Citadel Band, and ... Read more in Amazon's Loney Dear Store

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  • Buy a CD or a vinyl record, get a $1 Amazon MP3 Credit. Limit one promotional credit per customer. Here's how (restrictions apply)
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Frequently Bought Together

Dear John + Hall Music + Sologne
Price for all three: $34.51

Some of these items ship sooner than the others.

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  • Hall Music $13.53
  • Sologne $12.99

Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought


Product Details

  • Audio CD (August 28, 2012)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Polyvinyl Records
  • ASIN: B001N7LM3I
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Music
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #227,654 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Airport Surroundings
2. Everything Turns To You
3. I Was Only Going Out
4. Harsh Words
5. Under a Silent Sea
6. I Got Lost
7. Summers
8. Distant Lights
9. Harm/Slow
10. Violent
11. Dear John

Editorial Reviews

Review

"Despair has never sounded so sweet" --Spin

Product Description

Loney Dear is the recording name for multi-instrumentalist and Swedish home-recording phenom Emil Svanangen. "Dear John" is an album of contrasts. It will cozy up to you through the bleakest of winters and be your shade in the blistering summer sun.

Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
(3)
4.3 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Dark Masterpiece! February 12, 2009
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
Emil Svanängen's worldwide debut as Loney, Dear (2007's Loney, Noir) was one of the most delightful things to come out of Sweden in some time. On that remarkable album, Emil introduced himself as a sort of insecure, soft-spoken artist who just couldn't help but write some of the most endearing love songs of the past decade. To sum up the album with one word, it was "hopeful." Loney, Dear's newest release, Dear John, retains all of the artist's lovable characteristics, but turns to a darker side of music and love. Emil has taken his mild feelings of inadequacies and fleshed them out into a bleak, complex album that finds the artist shelving much of his genius pop songwriting in favor of a more minimalist, sullen atmosphere.

One would probably not guess this from the first track on the album. "Airport Surroundings" introduces a lot of synths and electronic drums, which were apparent on Loney, Noir, but not nearly as prominent as they are on John. Beyond the upbeat track, however, are some incredibly gloomy lyrics. Emil sounds as if he's on the precipice of a deep depression, battling with himself as to whether he will give into that hopelessness. He sings, "I took the fastest way down when I surrendered this time. I wasn't feeling no good. I took the easy way out," while adding that "You were all that I wanted." Hearing Svanängen pine for love is nothing new, but to see it wrapped up in such despair is quite the departure.

Much of Dear John seems to paint Emil as a person who is aware that he is in or near a state of depression, and oftentimes he speaks of "change;" the desire to change into a better version of himself. On "Everything Turns to You," one of the album's most striking songs, he sings of trying to change only to confess that, "all the times I make it worse with all the devils in my head." "Change" is a reappearing theme on the album, like on "Harsh Words" where he pleads, "Tell me I'm good enough, that I could change" or later on the fantastic "Distant Lights." It's clear that Emil is a man at war with himself, and at the very least it makes for a more complex listen.

Where Loney, Noir saw the artist compiling layers and layers of synths, vocals, and guitars to make large, beautiful sounds, Dear John finds Svanängen taking a more minimalist approach on occasion. "I Got Lost" is the first time that we get to hear Emil in this way. With only faint guitars and distant strings to accompany his vocals, the audience is allowed to hear the frailty in his voice when he asks, "Where's my lord to look for me now?" Later, on "Harm/Slow," one of Dear John's most impressive tracks, Emil sings against a backdrop of looming danger. The track, as the title suggests is actually two songs in one. "Harm" seems to be about the artist overcoming his fear of danger, of death, while "Slow" seems to show the artist's depression taking over him, to the point where he ends his life. He sings, "That's how I fell from top of twelve stories to the ground. For the reasons I had. The ones I know, the ones I don't. For all I forgot, that is all I could do, that is how I want you." Is this a suicide reference? It's definitely up for discussion, but the song's abrupt conclusion would seem to allude to an equally abrupt death.

Fortunately for fans of Loney, Dear's past work, there is plenty on this album that is more in line with what you would expect. "I Was Only Going Out" is classic Loney, Dear, sounding somewhat reminiscent of "The Meter Marks OK," and "Summers" is appropriately titled, as it's a very summery track. Emil does a great job of spacing these songs out on the album so as not to make it feel so lop-sided. "Under a Silent Sea" is easily the album's standout track in that it combines the minimalist tendencies of Dear John with the multi-layered ways of Loney, Dear's past albums. The difference is that the layers on the song are comprised of thick synths, and electronic drums. By the end of the song you're more likely to think you're listening to a dance album than Loney, Dear. At over 5 1/2 minutes, it's also the longest track on Dear John, but every second of the song is enchanting and I've listened to it at least a dozen times in the past few weeks.

Musically, emotionally, and lyrically, Dear John is all over the place. Through it all, however, it is Emil Svanängen's endearing personality that ties everything together and makes the album feel like a coherent piece of art. He is so honest in his work that you feel as if you know him personally, that you experience all the ups and downs of his life right beside him. Few artists are as open as Svanängen, and as a result, it's not often that an album of this caliber comes around. There have been rumblings in recent months of putting Loney, Dear to rest, and if that turns out to be the case, there can be no denying that Dear John is the artist's magnum opus. It is an album, so beautiful, so heartbreaking, touching, and real that it begs to be listened to over and over again.

Key Tracks:
1. "Airport Surroundings"
2. "Everything Turns to You"
3. "Under a Silent Sea"
4. "Distant Lights"
5. "Harm/Slow"

10 out of 10 Stars
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Loney, Dear's best album to date January 28, 2009
Format:MP3 Music
More of the atmospheric, luminously textured sounds we've come to know and love from Emil Svanangen (the man behind Loney, Dear), only better than ever. This album is more polished than his previous efforts and draws you in from the first listen. Track 1 ("Airport Surroundings") is a highlight, with a catchy synth-pop beat, and Dear John maintains that momentum for most of remainder of the album.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars They all kinda sound the same February 20, 2009
Format:Audio CD
I really, really, really, really love Loney, Dear. Sologne and Loney, Noir are my favorite CDs ... pretty much. I love his high-pitched singing voice. So, I understand the struggle, depression, and mellowness of this new CD. But I was truly disappointed to find that after listening to the entire CD straight through, I could only differentiate two songs from the others. The first and #7 have a discernable sound. The others kind of sound like variations on each other. The lyrics occasionally repeat as well. There's no high pitched singing. I don't have a problem with the melancholia, but truly, this CD just doesn't have anything very memorable on it -- I'll stick to his past work. Maybe it will grow on me ... we'll see.
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