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Helplessness Blues

Fleet FoxesMP3 Download
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (119 customer reviews)

Price: $9.99
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Album Savings: $1.89 compared to buying all songs

  • Original Release Date: May 2, 2011
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
 
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  Song Title Time Price  
Play   1. Montezuma 3:37 $0.99 Buy Track  - Montezuma
Play   2. Bedouin Dress 4:29 $0.99 Buy Track  - Bedouin Dress
Play   3. Sim Sala Bim 3:14 $0.99 Buy Track  - Sim Sala Bim
Play   4. Battery Kinzie 2:49 $0.99 Buy Track  - Battery Kinzie
Play   5. The Plains / Bitter Dancer 5:53 $0.99 Buy Track  - The Plains / Bitter Dancer
Play   6. Helplessness Blues 5:03 $0.99 Buy Track  - Helplessness Blues
Play   7. The Cascades 2:07 $0.99 Buy Track  - The Cascades
Play   8. Lorelai 4:24 $0.99 Buy Track  - Lorelai
Play   9. Someone You'd Admire 2:29 $0.99 Buy Track  - Someone You'd Admire
Play 10. The Shrine / An Argument 8:07 $0.99 Buy Track  - The Shrine / An Argument
Play 11. Blue Spotted Tail 3:05 $0.99 Buy Track  - Blue Spotted Tail
Play 12. Grown Ocean 4:36 $0.99 Buy Track  - Grown Ocean
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Product Details


Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
71 of 81 people found the following review helpful
Format:MP3 Download
Something remarkable is going on here and its great to watch and listen. Two observations to start with, if as suggested in the music press that Fleet Foxes main man Robin Pecknold has poured his heart and soul into their second album "Helplessness blues" it has paid off and this not only equals their great debut but surpasses it. The second reflection is that New Musical Express has given this album a paltry two stars in a hideously awful review from an increasingly irrelevant music magazine. This in itself should encourage you to buy it since "Helplessness blues" is a triumphant classic and while its stays firmly within the orbit of harmony heavy folk rock of "Ragged Wood" it marks a substantial and mature progression for this Seattle band. This is particularly pronounced in terms of Pecknold's songwriting skills which take off into the stratosphere and the band produce some of the greatest soaring harmony singing this side of Simon and Garfunkel's "Bookends" and the great debut by Crosby, Stills and Nash.

Start with the brilliant title track. This song is divided into two parts firstly a introspective set of lyrics by Pecknold leads to a vocal tour de force which at 2.58 then moves into a sublime Fleet Foxes harmony workout. It is easily one of the best songs released this year but is matched on the album but equally bold contributions. "Sim Sala Bim" is delightful haunting folk song which splits into two parts with the CSN influence especially pronounced in its forceful second part. The reflective opener "Montezuma" sees Pecknold in a pensive mood questioning, "So now I am older/Than my mother and father/, When they had their daughter/Now what does that say about me" over almost warm religious style harmonies. It contrasts with the joyous "Battery Kinzie" probably the song that could have sat most happily on their debut. The albums centerpieces are two episodic songs of which first up is "The Plains/Bitter Dancer" a six minute journey containing some of the albums best harmonies and the albums longest track "The Shrine/An argument" a sort of baroque "Paranoid Android' with a powerful vocal by Pecknold which takes us on a journey from folk to a wig out free jazz conclusion. It is stirring perfection and will take audiences by storm on the forthcoming UK tour.

Other highlights include "Lorelai" which owes a huge debt to one of Dylan's best but not always most heralded songs "4th Time Round" from "Blonde on Blonde". Then there is the intriguing instrumental "Cascades", the slightly jazzy "Bedouin Dress" and two of the most gorgeous songs Pecknold has penned. First the lush "Something to admire" and the truly sublime sparse acoustics of "Blue Spotted Tail" where we can forgive Pecknold's "hippy" affectations for the wonderful sweet yearning which underpins it. The whole thing is topped off with the cherry on the cake that is "Grown Ocean" which was the highlight of the set they performed on Jools Holland with Pecknold's voice cracking as the songs pace picked up and surged. It starts with him announcing "In that dream I'm as old as the mountains/Still is starlight reflected in fountains/Children grown on the edge of the ocean/Kept like jewellery kept with devotion". It builds to a massive acoustic crescendo with the band firing on all cylinders and concludes with a gentle verse.

It is a fitting ending to an album, which sees the band radically redefine as oppose to reinvent their sound, but by doing so build on the brilliance of their debut and actually "outpunch" it. This album is a flashbulb moment for music in 2011. It sets down an American benchmark for others to aspire towards, in the same way that PJ Harvey's "Let England Shake" has done in the UK. God knows how the Fleet Foxes follow this album (although we thought that after "Ragged Wood" and the "Sun Giant EP") for as it stands "Helplessness Blues" is the sound of rock music redemption.
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27 of 30 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
It seems to me like most bands either try to change too much with their second album, and in the process lose their sound, or they just rehash the first album and reveal themselves as one-trick ponies. Fleet Foxes do neither of these things. This album is different, but not too different. Lyrically, the focus has changed from interpersonal relationships and family to introspection and society...so their moving inward and outward at the same time. These guys are all improving as musicians. This material is more complex and the performances are closer to perfect. The singing and drums are especially tight. Overall, it's what you'd expect if you've been listening to these guys for a few years, and if you've enjoyed their other stuff than you will probably like this. My only complaint is that some of the arrangements may be too complex and the soundscape becomes too saturated at times. That's not enough to keep me from giving it a 5-star rating though. Enjoy!
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28 of 33 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Fleet Foxes seemingly came out of nowhere in 2008 with the promising "Sun Giant" EP, followed later in the year with their self-titled album, which immediately won critical acclaim. After lots of touring and a botched attempt to record a new album (the band scrapped the first recording sessions), now finally comes the highly anticipated second album.

"Helplessness Blues" (12 tracks; 50 min.) is no radical departure from the first album, sounding ever more gorgeous, if anything. Singer-songwriter Robin Pecknold continues to explore the sounds of spaceous folk-rock, with clear influences from Simon and Garfunkel, and the intrecate vocal interplay (reminicent of, say, the Beach Boys) are even more in the forefront than on the debut album. All of of this is a good thing. The album kicks off with a gentle "Montezuma" and great tracks follow one after another. It is clear that Pecknold has thrown his heart and soul into making this album. Special mention goes to track 5, "The Plains/Bitter Dancer", which is really several songs into one track, but it works just beautiful. The title track follows, and is of course nothing "blues"-like, but in the ache that the song brings about. A short instrumental "The Gascades" is the bridge into the second half of the album. "Lorelai" is a sunny love-song. It eventually leads to track 11 "Blue Spotted Tail", just Pecknold solo on acoustic guitar, and it would be a fine album closer in my book. But it is followed by one more track "Grown Ocean", which is not bad, but somehow for me it felt like one song too many. But it's a minor quibble, to be honest. In all, this is clearly one of the best albums of the year so far.

With the unexpected (and on-going) chart success of Mumford and Sons, and this being such a highly anticipated album, I'm guessing this album is going to crash into the top ranks of the Billboard 200 album chart upon its release, and deseverdly so. I had the chance of catching Fleet Foxes live at the Coachella music festival in April, 2009, and they were one of THE highlights of the festival for me, just mesmorizing. Equally great was the rare solo set that Robin Pecknold brought here in Cincinnati in April, 2010 at the MusicNOW festival (curated by the Dessner brothers of the National), in which he brought several of these new songs (along with some covers and nuggets from the debut album). What a set that was. Meanwhile, "Helplessness Blues" is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Great weekend morning music
Very well-done, relaxed music. Very acoustic-guitar and mood-based, with some Crosby, Stills, and Nash-style harmonizing. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Jacob E. Miller
Good album, a little monotonous but pleasant
I've listened to this album once and here are my thoughts:

Pretty good album, this one. It's got a kind of 60's psychedelic folk-rock think going on, and will instantly... Read more
Published 2 months ago by T. W. White
Joy
Full harmonies, intriguing lyrics, phenomenal song writing. Prefer this album over the previous offering; this one is richer, more complex.
Published 2 months ago by S. Joyce
Strangely haunting, and almost human
Helplessness Blues was so-so the first time I heard a few of its songs on the radio, but Fleet Foxes has the strange ability to create songs which become more likeable over time,... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Sowing the Wind
2011's Best
There is something devout about the vocals here, they come in like the sunlight and fade away like a rainbow. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Harkanwar Anand
Christmas Present
Album was a requested Christmas present. It arrived earlier than expected. It was packaged and protected against rough handling very well.
Published 3 months ago by Texan
Beyond words
I can't even use words to explain how much I love this album. I've listened to it on top of the Smokey Mountains and on road trips in the middle of Illinois. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Artie2day
Very nice harmonies
While many seem to compare this group to The Beach Boys, I feel they are much closer to the sound of early Crosby Stills and Nash. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Mr. Ed
Another Outstanding Album!
This is a great album for anyone looking for some calming, melodic, and genuinely well written music! Read more
Published 4 months ago by BURN8ER
Not quite Simon & Garfunkel
In theory I like Fleet Foxes a lot. Think melodic melancholy of Simon & Garfunkel with a more modern soundscape. In practice the melancholy is there but the melody falls flat. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Andrus
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