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East Of Eden

Taken By TreesMP3 Download
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

Price: $8.91
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  • Original Release Date: September 8, 2009
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
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  Song Title Time Price  
Play   1. To Lose Someone 4:46 $0.99 Buy Track  - To Lose Someone
Play   2. Anna 4:25 $0.99 Buy Track  - Anna
Play   3. Watch The Waves 4:24 $0.99 Buy Track  - Watch The Waves
Play   4. Greyest Love Of All 3:41 $0.99 Buy Track  - Greyest Love Of All
Play   5. Tidens Gång 1:45 $0.99 Buy Track  - Tidens Gång
Play   6. Wapas Karna 2:36 $0.99 Buy Track  - Wapas Karna
Play   7. My Boys 3:11 $0.99 Buy Track  - My Boys
Play   8. Day By Day 3:25 $0.99 Buy Track  - Day By Day
Play   9. Bekännelse 4:20 $0.99 Buy Track  - Bekännelse
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4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Inspired Pakistani Musical Experiment From Taken By Trees Front Woman Victoria Bergsman, September 27, 2009
This review is from: East of Eden (Audio CD)
East Of Eden, the second album from Taken By Trees, the solo project of Victoria Bergsman, may be a short album with 9 tracks clocking in just over 32 minutes, but it packs a pretty powerful wallop by its conclusion. The core material of the album was recorded over a six day period in Pakistan with the help of local musicians. It's an almost perfectly conceived set of moody acoustic indie pop augmented, enhanced and sometimes transformed by the contributions of the musicians with which Bergsman collaborated. In the middle of the record Bergsman has also placed two non-English language tracks, one in Swedish and the other a Pakistani track called "Wapas Karna," and follows those up with an inspired cover of the Animal Collective song "My Girls," here entitled "My Boys." It ends on a lovely note with the instrumental "Bekännelse," which preserves the ambient noises of its original recording session, including what sounds like the shout of a child at the very beginning. East Of Eden will certainly take its place as one of the most memorable indie pop records of the year. Standout cuts: "To Lose Someone," "Watch The Waves," "Greyest Love Of All" and "My Boys."
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Taken By Trees - East of Eden 8/10, November 9, 2009
This review is from: East of Eden (Audio CD)
Whether it is for spiritual, artistic, or less, ahem, savory reasons, the East has always been a musical mecca for soul-searching bands. From the Beatles experiment with Indian music to Pete Doherty's brief (and ultimately failed) excursion to Thailand to get clean, the Eastern world has, for all globalization has done since the `60s, retained an exciting mystique and a wealth of cultural traditions that many musicians have found impossible to ignore. Few, however, have found their tours as treacherous as Victoria Bergsman, former singer of Swedish pop band the Concretes. Accosted by ultra-religious locals as soon as she arrived in rural Pakistan, the single Bergsman improvised, pretending her sound engineer was her husband so that they could travel around the country without further problems. Given Bergsman's penchant for delicately intricate indie pop, one might expect such a tension-filled trip would have thrown a wrench in the proverbial songwriting gears, but East of Eden comes off as an impossibly relaxed, genuinely constructed album that meshes East and West improbably well.

Many an album recorded in foreign environments has come off as patronizing or a fraud, taking only the merest of cultural touchstones or instruments and calling it fusion when it is more often a parody. Even for all the hoopla regarding the Beatles' stay in India, Eastern styles were really apparent only on a few of their efforts. East of Eden, then, is a rarity, an album that from start to finish immerses itself in the Pakistani culture but retains that quintessentially Swedish pop edge that Bergsman long ago mastered. It's an exciting and, at first listen, a perplexing sort of record. Few familiar with the Concretes or the last Taken By Trees record will know how to reconcile Bergman's soft vocals with sitar flourishes and male backing vocals wailing in traditional Pakistani tongues. But as this deceptively short album gently unwinds its way through the mountains and villages of the countryside, it's clear that Bergsman remains just as comfortable behind these alien textures as she does behind a piano and multi-layered harmonies.

Opening track "To Lose Someone" sets the template for what's to come, opening with a light acoustic guitar melody before a swell of instrumentation surfaces, subtle tablas and dhol working off the rhythm while a flute sighs in the background. Bergsman's vocals remain restrained throughout the track and the rest of the album, creating a tangible but not overpowering atmosphere of exotic locales and the kind of images normally reserved for National Geographic articles. Most of all, it's delightfully understated - nothing here is forced, and when the haunting wailing of a guest vocalist closes out the song in intriguing fashion, it comes off as undeniably genuine rather than an opportunistic genre theft.

Tender and exquisitely emotive with even the barest whisper, Bergsman is of course the thread that holds everything together. Fans of her earlier work won't be surprised to see her do quiet here, but they might be shocked at how effortlessly her vocals, which run the gamut from standard indie-pop love tales to a Herman Hesse poem sung entirely in Swedish, fit into this worldly tapestry. Amidst tribal percussion and a bansuri flute on "Watch The Waves" Bergsman's ethereal pipes combine nicely with the tune's dreamy tone. Her declaration to "hold you for a hundred years / take away your greatest fears" on the sprightly "Day By Day," meanwhile, transforms it into a sort of "Young Folks" for the Eastern crowd, with its village dance drum line and poppy woodwind refrain.

When Bergsman strays too far from her roots, like on the drone-y, ambient Swedish-language closer "Bekannelse," (that aforementioned Hesse poem), it's too easy for her personality to get lost in the shuffle. Indeed, "Wapas Karna," the ill-advised field recording of a traditional Sufi folk song performed entirely by untrained locals, suffers mightily from zero contribution by the Swedish chanteuse. But when Bergsman is on, East of Eden produces some otherworldly gems, from "Watch The Waves" to the expertly produced sonic threads of "The Greyest Love of All," where a slippery sitar line, flutes, and Bergsman's soothing vocals collude in a mesmerizing display of musical cross-pollination, and a damn fine pop song at that. And that's not even mentioning the spot-on backing vocals of Animal Collective's Noah Lennox (no stranger to weird out-of-country experiments) on the lovely ode "Anna," nor the superb cover of that band's "My Girls" (here retitled, of course, "My Boys"). With traditional Sufi instrumentation, all buzzing harmonium and lacking even a hint of electronic noise, the song is a revelation, a hypnotic 180-degree shift in direction that reinvents one of 2009's best songs and makes it perhaps more relevant than ever in the context of East of Eden's origins.

It's tough to compare how this stacks up to Bergsman's previous work or that of any other similar artist, as Bergsman has not so much gone in a new direction as totally teleported herself and her listeners to an entirely new world. Few can make such an out-of-left-field experiment work and, better yet, not come off as unbearably pretentious doing it. East of Eden is not a perfect record, and it will definitely not be for everyone. But for those who put the time into it, who revel in the gossamer musical layers that, more than anything else, joyously create an atmosphere to get lost in, it's a simultaneously beguiling and dazzling experience.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Subtle and quirky Swedish/Pakistani blending, November 14, 2009
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This review is from: East of Eden (Audio CD)
I love the first half of this recording so much so that it should receive five stars, but unfortunately the last half should get no more than three; hence, my four star rating, maybe it should actually be 3.5. I realize there's been and invasion of the Hives et al and other Swedish acts as of late; but the last act that touched me (besides Jens Lekman and Peter, Paul, and Bjorn) was Bo Hanson. Now Taken By Trees. Love the plaintive simplicity. The First four tracks had me absolutely tickled on this foggy Santa Cruz morning. Her somewhat dead pan voicings over the bubbling tablas and other instrumentation achieved the rare feat of being relaxing while also being upbeat. The last half drags of the cd drags somewhat and looses my interest, sounding like B rate movie soundtrack--and I love music from this part of the world. I am smitten by TBT so much so that I'm going to buy her other record.
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