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Half Smiles of the Decomposed
 
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Half Smiles of the Decomposed [Import]

Guided by VoicesAudio CD
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)


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MP3 Download, 14 Songs, 2004 $9.06  
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Music

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Biography

Here is the last Guided By Voices album. Not in the sense of “Here is the previous Guided By Voices album,” but in the sense of “final.” If it’s true in movies where the voice-over says “You never really appreciate something until it’s gone,” and the credits roll, and you leave the theater with little bits of popcorn stuck to your shoes, then you will soon appreciate Guided By Voices. Because… Read more in Amazon's Guided by Voices Store

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for 44 albums, 3 photos, and 1 full streaming song.

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 5, 2004)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: P-Vine Japan
  • ASIN: B0002B58AE
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (29 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,020,446 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. Everybody Thinks I'm a Raincloud (When I'm Not Looking)
2. Sleep Over Jack
3. Girls of Wild Strawberries
4. Gonna Never Have to Die
5. Window of My World
6. The Closets of Henry
7. Tour Guide at the Winston Churchill Memorial
8. Asia Minor
9. Sons of Apollo
10. Sing for Your Meat
11. Asphyxiated Circle
12. A Second Spurt of Growth
13. (S)Mothering and Coaching
14. Huffman Prairie Flying Field
15. The Mind Refuser [*]

Editorial Reviews

After twenty-odd years and twenty-odd releases, this is the final album by Ohio's famed geniuses. It's their most serious and mature record in years, more akin to those recorded in the mid-90s than the most recent releases. At the same time, it's influenced by both American and British mid-60s chime-pop, pointing out the intricate interweaving guitar lines, the stunning wordplay, the vastly melancholic and somehow still uplifting tone, the impeccably tossed-off phrasing, and the stately, plump rhythm section. Elegiac and remorseful; a jewel of a farewell. --This text refers to an alternate Audio CD edition.

 

Customer Reviews

29 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (29 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mutations and Incarnations, August 4, 2005
The Last GBV Album, Half Smiles of The Decomposed, will be the most underrated and misunderstood in the catalog, perhaps eclipsed by the lukewarm Do The Collapse. While these two albums couldn't be more opposed in sound, they show the band making a choice to focus on a specific element in the sound. While Collapse embraced the cracked arena rock leanings of the group, Half Smile is about the intimate melancholy. The album is as down as the group can get. Sure they perk up alittle for "Girls of Wild Strawberries", a Glad Girls for four years later or the morning after, and "Huffman Prairie" but, it is the tiny post lo-fi moments that dominate here. It feels like two pre TVT eps fused together and informed by the knowledge of the years after. Certainly tepid compared to the two "return to Matador" albums but certainly heartfelt. The first problem is that the album lacks a certain coherence which suggest perhaps two eps would have been preferred. It is the first album in some time released by GBV which feels alittle long, even at its brief length. Secondly, the band feels submerged and lacking a true identity beyond Pollard's backing band. While this harkens back to early incarnations of the band, I miss the band who made themselves known on the last three albums. With the constant mutations that has been norm for the band I guess this should not be a surprise. That said I can't help but feel that if this had been released as Pollard project under a different name, it would not have been easier to take. Up to this point the identity of GBV and Pollard's other works had been clearly divided. Here the later has overtaken the former. You have two choices. Either accept Earthquake Glue as the last album of the last incarnation of GBV. OR take your favorite tracks from here and fuse them with The Pipe Dreams of Instant Price Whippet and imagine you live in an alternate universe. A footnote for fans but NOT the place to start. Pick a spot from about ten years ago and work from there, both backwards and forwards. An acceptable album from an incredible band is better than most CDs you can buy. Still it simply does not stand on its own like their better works.
(Besides if I wanted to hear good Bob side project stuff, I'd listen to Choreographed Man of War or the first Bob and Doug album.)
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Grows on you..., October 15, 2004
By 
Micah Newman (Dallas, TX United States) - See all my reviews
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...don't groan: often, reviews summed up in the phrase above come from someone who really "wants to like" the album in question, but are reluctant to let their gut judgement prevail. However, this isn't one of those. I'd just like to sing some praises of a good album that might at first blush seem "anticlimactic" as the final GBV record.

_Half Smiles..._ is not quite as immediate and catchy as the previous one, _Earthquake Glue_. But don't think it simply pales in comparison as a result. This one's just a bit moodier and subdued; even when it's upbeat and catchy, it's still got a twinge of world-weariness.

Similarly-sequenced as _Earthquake Glue_, _Half Smiles..._ does seem a bit front-loaded, with all the catchiest numbers in the first third or so of the CD: here, they are "Everyone Thinks I'm A Raincloud," (do they, now) "Girls of Wild Strawberries," and "Gonna Never Have to Die." "Window of My World" will get into your skull with its wondering-boy-poet melody and unexpectedly pumped-up refrain. But the rest of the album satisfies, too. The moods throughout fluctuate interestingly between lightweight, pensive, elegiac, and back again, giving the album a coherent overall "feel" that adds to its allure. It all works, and it's too bad this is the last one. Then again, maybe my pocketbook needs a rest from the endless stream of GBV that keeps drawing me in! Bob doesn't seem to be disbanding the group because of any erosion over time of his idiosyncratically brilliant tunesmithing and songcrafting skills, if this CD is any indication.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Fine Farewell, September 24, 2004
By 
If, as claimed, this truly is the last GBV record, at least they're going out on a high note. If not quite the classic some hoped for, its still in the upper-echelon of GBV records, no small achievement from a band that puts out product on a seemingly bi-monthly basis.

As on most GBV releases, there's a certain amount of filler and half-realized experiments, but Robert Pollard and company maintain a reasonably high batting average, with several tunes entering the canon of GBV classics. Rockers like "Everybody Thinks I'm a Raincloud (When I'm Not Looking)," "Girls of Wild Strawberries," and "The Closets of Henry" meet all the minimum requirements for hook-laced pop genius while "Windows of My World" and "Tour Guide at the Winston Churchill Memorial" show Pollard progressing as a songwriter, finally able to nail the killer ballads that have just eluded him over the years.

Best of all is the closing track "Huffman Prarie Flying Field." Its starts off with one last unbelievably catchy GBV melody and drives forward from there. Listening you keep waiting for the killer chorus to arrive until, like so many Pollard's best tunes, about two minutes in you realize the whole song is just one big chorus. In the last minute, the songs shifts directions into a type of coda that manages to be elegiac and celebretory all at once. In a fitting gesture, former guitarist and secondary songwriter Tobin Sprout returns on guitar for the tune, bringing the band's oddysey full circle and providing a fitting sense of closure. If GBV's career were ever made into a movie, this would be a fitting track to play over the closing credits.

All in all, if not quite "Bee Thousand" or "Alien Lanes," "Half Smiles is a memorable farewell, filled with moments of sublime beauty.
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