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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Album of 2002
Kill the Moonlight certainly got on a lot of end of the year top ten lists. Admittedly, these are kind of lean times for the music community, so maybe it doesn't take all that much to stand out these days. But Spoon displays genuine enthusiasm performing melodic, adult rock and roll, supported by an active, but not too heavy handed mixing/effects board. I'm sure there...
Published on January 20, 2003 by Heavy Theta

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not their best, but certainly not your worst
3 1/2


The Texas foursome's winning streak continued with this year-after follow up to the widely praised Girls Can Tell. Spoon effortlessly continues to create catchy, tense, radio-friendly rock at the drop of a hat, though the quick release may be indicative of the hurried feel of the disc. Of course their are a few amazing songs, worthy right next to...
Published on September 15, 2007 by IRate


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20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Album of 2002, January 20, 2003
By 
Heavy Theta (Lorton, Va United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
Kill the Moonlight certainly got on a lot of end of the year top ten lists. Admittedly, these are kind of lean times for the music community, so maybe it doesn't take all that much to stand out these days. But Spoon displays genuine enthusiasm performing melodic, adult rock and roll, supported by an active, but not too heavy handed mixing/effects board. I'm sure there are many afficianados long aware of the band, but they seemed to just come out of left field with this kickass record. Which is how pop is supposed to work.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A minimal masterpiece, May 11, 2003
By 
Tyler McGaughey (san angelo, Texas) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
I first heard of the band of Austin, Texas indie rockers called Spoon when they performed on the famed PBS show "Austin City Limits" with Ben Kweller. When "Kill the Moonlight" was listed as one of Rolling Stone magazine's Top 50 Records of the Year, I decided to pick it up.

At first I thought that the singer, Britt Daniel, was doing his best Elvis Costello impression. But strangely, each time I listen to this CD, the resemblance to that new-wave troubadour grows smaller and smaller.

Another thing that struck me at first was how much SPACE there was on this album. The opening track, the superbly catchy "Small Stakes", only has organ and tambourine to accompany the vocals. But any [person] can make space, right? Ah, yes, that is true. It's how you USE THAT SPACE that makes great music. And Spoon does just that. On most songs there is just a sparse piano melody line, with drums and bass, to underscore Britt daniel's pleading and similarly simplistic lyrics.

I have made the comparison to Elvis Costello, and indeed, this band conjure up the spirits of punk/new-wave greats on a few songs. "Jonathon Fisk" reminds me of The Clash and "The Way We Get By" sounds like a New York Dolls demo. But these blokes are not just copying what others did in '77. Just listen to the fabulous "Paper Tiger" and tell me if Sid Vicious could ever be that compassionate or musically mature.

Although the album is barely 35 minutes long, it never seems like it is a short throwaway because the songs are of such high quality. From the human beatbox-based "Stay Don't Go" to the organic and slightly pschyadelic closer "Vittorio E.", "Kill the Moonlight" is one of the best and finest albums to have been released in 2002.

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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kill the moonlight, May 23, 2003
By 
Sacco (here there and everywhere) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
Spoon are without a doubt a great band. While their influences are obvious they're no where as derivative as the majority of the 'neo garage' bands that have cropped up in recent years. In my humble opinion Kill The Moonlight is Spoon's best album and one of the best of this decade so far. For starters its the most cohesive album by Spoon so far, the track listing flows perfectly. But also it contains the best set of Spoon songs thus far produced.

The sound is minimalistic, the beat boxy and keyboard opener Small Stakes sets the tone for that perfectly. The Way We Get By is a slacker slice of life, though suitably for Spoon not a full blown anthem. The rest of the album is a mix of sexual and modern life near angst though never falling into that dangerous self indulgent depression that often drags a band down.

The greastest merit of Spoon is their cohesive sound. While the vocals are not great, and the band are competent but not exceptional muscicians they sound great on every song. Spoon are tight band whith an almost old style rhythm and blues feel. Not experimental sure, but that really doesn't matter when they sound this good.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Under the Cherry Moon is where Jonathan Fisk kissed me, October 23, 2002
By 
John Bounds (los angeles, california United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
What's up with all this Pavement comparison? Pavement had their day and for all the clever word skills Malkmus Possessed they rarely captured me with any particular song. These guys are not Pavement and all I can say is...THANK GOD. From the first track Spoon had my full attention. My mouth was open and everything. I am sure a bug could have flew in or something. "Small Stakes" yes, lord. A track that feels so urgent. like they had to get the vocals out before the cholos waiting outside broke in. If I had to compare that particular song to anyone I would compare it to the Jam when that got their sound honed and got that melodic bounce going. It's more about the delivery than a direct sound alike. He sings in a Welleresque style on that track as well as "Jonathan Fisk" . I even get a Elvis Costello vibe from a few tracks too. Something in the way the song is sung. There is an immediacy to the tracks amongst the beat and pop. I love it. It keeps you sort of guessing when the guitar solos and typical pop polyforms will kick in...good news, kids...they don't. Spoon keeps it moving...never breaking stride.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's no Girls Can Tell, but man is it good, August 29, 2002
By 
"dresneer" (Basking Ridge, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
Spoon can pull off something very few bands are capable of- having every album sound incredibly different from its predecessor and yet somehow maintaining the sound that is decidedly Spoon.

People who loved Girls Can Tell might be surprised and even disappointed that Kill the Moonlight takes the band in a very unexpected direction. But that will only last during the first listen.

What makes songs like Everything Hits at Once so spectacular is their minimalistic approaches, meaning the songs aren't very layered at all. Somehow, Spoon creates the illusion that the song is much more complex than it really is. Nw imagine if they took that minimalism and applied it to an entire album- you get Kill the Moonlight.

Don't be discouraged by the first track Small Stakes. It is by far the weakest of the album meaning once you get past it, the rest is pure gravy. The real standouts are "The Way We Get By" and "Stay Don't Go" (driven by its incredibly catchy beat). By the end of the third track, it's pretty apparent which direction the album is headed, and, as stated before, it may take the Spoon fan by surprise. But give it a chance, because the band that keeps changing never gets boring.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pavement? The Fall? Spoon has a sound of their own!!, September 8, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
I'm not sure what album Aidin Vaziri was listening to, but it certainly wasn't Spoon's Kill the Moonlight. I don't mean to pick on Mr. Vaziri, but I don't want the uninitiated to get the wrong sound in their minds. I love Pavement and The Fall, don't get me wrong, but Spoon doesn't sound a thing like either of them.

As for this album--it is a solid, cohesive record, without a weak track. In my opinion, it does not hit the highs of Series of Sneaks, nor the lows. There are 3 or 4 songs on Sneaks that I consider classics, but quite a bit of filler as well. After 9-10 listens, Moonlight is more consistently very good, but not great. Still worth buying, and definitely top ten for '02.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sheer Happenstance, September 3, 2002
By 
Ace Kabob (East Texas, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
So I'm in Austin visiting family . . . At 2:00 in the morning, I have to drive to Randalls (for those not fortunate enough to live in the Lone Star State, Randalls is the overpriced grocery store chain of the millenium) to pick up some suddenly needed medicine for the kiddo. On my return trip to the house, I'm listening to 91.7 FM, when the DJ announces that he will next play a song by the band Spoon. For two-and-a-half minutes, I am mesmerized by the song I now know to be "Vittorio E." I now know so, because as we were leaving town the next day, we stopped at Waterloo Records (fabulous independent record store) so that I could pick up a copy of this outstanding CD. I will leave the song-by-song reviews to those who are more inclined to write as much. Simply put, this CD is a must-have, and the aforementioned "Vittorio E." and "Don't Let It Get You Down" {not to be confused with Graham Parker's "Don't Let It Break You Down) are two of the finest songs I have heard in many a moon.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Looking For Hidden Gems?, July 17, 2006
By 
John Farrell (Watertown, MA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
I don't know why I bought this CD except that Spoon was getting a lot of critical praise in some of the rags. One reviewer below said he listened to this record obsessively for a couple of months. I did the very same thing. I buy a ton of music and I tend to buy CDs for a given band in bunches. I bought Gimmie Fiction and Kill Moonlight in the same emptying of the bucket I do each month here at Amazon. Sometimes they sit for a month or two until I get to them, but when I get to them I give them fair play as they say in the UK. I'll probably get skewered by this from somebody, but I liken this record to The Dandy Warhols' Welcome To The Monkey House (great CD, check it out if you don't own it); it's good clean foot tapping fun across the board. The sweet spot on this record for me is from track four "Stay, Don't Go" through track eight in "Don't Let It Get You Down." They are all catchy, well written, and remind me of some other band somehow. I definitely do not mean that in a negative way. I'm now a fan for sure. I have over 3400 CDs and many of them are in and out of the carousel in one or two listens after the initial surge, but this one I keep skipping as I replace the other CDs. I can't quite explain it. I always seems to want to hear it one more time before I file it. That's when I know I've hit on something. I'm always in constant search of great records that nobody knows that are good all the way through and this one qualifies. Recommended. Good job Spoon if you are out there somewhere reading.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Record, December 16, 2002
By 
Stinji "stinji" (Northampton, MA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
Just had to chime in here - Aidin Vaziri is way off in his review on this one. I've got the feeling that he just wants us to be aware that he respects Pavement and the Fall. That's great, Aidin. But the relationship between either of those artists and the new Spoon record ends at the fact that most record stores are gonna stick it in the same section.

Sparse economy in production leaves the songs nice and clean, but this isn't some indier-than-thou Malkmus lo-fi wanna be, as Vaziri seems to imply. It's some real tasty ear candy, it's got good rock attitude, and I like it.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Junkmedia.org Review - Tell me I'm wrong!, March 25, 2003
By 
junkmedia (Los Angeles, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kill the Moonlight (Audio CD)
Spoon's last record, the excellent Girls Can Tell, was a polished pop-rock affair that bristled beneath its shiny sonic veneer, surprising many who believed that their major label casualty, Series of Sneaks, would not and could not be topped. Yet, Girls showed a band that was willing to grow and take risks; a band that was carving out a unique sound of their own from the moldering rock being played today. It mixed main man Britt Daniel's fluid guitar hooks and Jim Eno's precision drumming with a wider palette of sounds, such as vibes, violin, harpsichord and, most notably, piano.

As a result, it topped many critics' and fans' year-end lists, while severely increasing the anticipation for something more. Although their latest album, Kill the Moonlight, is not as immediately compelling as its predecessor, it slowly reveals itself to be their best and most fully realized work to date.

Part of the reason for this lack of immediacy is the way it was recorded, with instruments often panned wide in the mix, leaving immense amounts of open space in the songs. Initially a disorienting effect, it ultimately throws the focus back onto Daniel's voice, which has a raw lyrical swagger that recalls both Costello and Westerberg in their primes. And while Daniel's voice is often the focal point, its emotional resonance is bolstered by the use of piano chords, backward beats, the low moan of saxophones and perfectly executed handclaps and shaking tambourines.

All of this adds up to a stripped down, nearly skeletal sound that continues to resonate and reverberate with the listener long after the music has stopped. The album opens with "Small Stakes," which is a song that deals with risks, both sonically and lyrically. Daniel's lyrics castigate those content with the status quo and unwilling to "think big ... past one or two." It is almost as if he is defining the band and this album through the negative: they will not "sell [themselves] short" and this record will not be full of safe and predictable songs. The music supports this by using none of the trademark guitar fuzz of earlier Spoon efforts, instead relying on stuttering keys and a lone tambourine for nearly the whole song. Eno's booming drums kick in only during the last 30 seconds, as a sonic punctuation mark which seems to back up Daniel's mid-song taunt, "Tell me I'm wrong!"

From song one, the listener is given notice of their intentions. And the rest of the album is as big-sounding and challenging as the opening salvo. "The Way We Get By" has a boogie-woogie piano bounce and infectious chorus that could get even static indie-rock kids shuffling their feet, while the human beat box of "Stay Don't Go" suggests that The Flaming Lips finally have some competition in that department. Indeed, some people have even labeled this song danceable! "Something To Look Forward To" and "Jonathan Fisk" give us back the lean, Wire-like guitar of old, which demands to be turned all the way up.

Slower songs, such as "Paper Tiger" and "Don't Let It Get You Down," show off Daniel's higher range, while offering cautiously optimistic lyrics amidst a minimalist backing of drum sticks and odd keys or tinkling piano, respectively. It all takes some getting used to, but to ditch this album after the first listen would be about the gravest mistake a music fan could make this year. And while this may sound like the standard critical hyperbole, I dare you to listen and "Tell me I'm wrong!"

Barin McGrath
Junkmedia.org Review

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Kill the Moonlight
Kill the Moonlight by Spoon (Audio CD - 2002)
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