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10 Reviews
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautiful!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
This album is incredible! It far outshines their self-titled debut. The songs are ethereal and the harmonies stunning. If you like folksy pop music, please listen to this! You wont be disappointed.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
High Lights,
By Stephen Doig (New Zealand) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
The Pierces are two sisters who make pretty, accessible and well crafted pop music with an emphasis on gorgeous harmonizing. Critics, of course, won't like The Pierces because their music is neither dark nor pretensious nor deliberately obscure and unintelligible. I like to be challenged by music as much as the next person, but there are also times I simply want something to sing along to in the car without having to work too hard. This is what good pop music should do and Light Of The Moon fits the bill nicely.
Thrilling opener 'Space Song' boasts a fantastic hook and a lovely, swelling chorus and makes a very good first impression. 'A Way To Us' is catchy upbeat pop that would no doubt appeal to fans of Michelle Branch. Other songs take a more Fleetwood Mac approach - beautifully crafted, with lingering melodies and the sisters harmonizing to the fore, and it's on these songs that The Pierces really strike gold. In fact, if I were Mick Fleetwood, Stevie Nicks & co. I'd be asking the Pierce sisters to do a little songwriting on the side because tunes like 'Louisa', 'You're Right' and 'I Don't Mind' are miles better than anything on the Mac's last studio album. Much more than just pretty faces, The Pierces possess musical talent in abundance, and if gorgeous melodies are your thing then the remarkably consistent Light Of The Moon will provide you with an album full of them. Highlights: 'Space Song', 'Louisa', 'I Don't Mind'
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautiful Harmony,
By
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
Their first album was fantastic and this one is better!! From beginning to end great harmonies and smooth upbeat sound.
"give it all back" is the best. Highly recommended.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Harmonics,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
I loved this CD from start to finish. My fingers never even itched to hit the forward button, not for a second. I love the harmonics they employ, weaving in and out of each other beautifully.
'The Space Song' was my instant favorite. I had heard 'Save Me' before, though not the version on this CD. That's not a complaint exactly. While not the same song I had heard on "Roswell," it does have its own beauty in the bridge that I can't get out of my head. 'Patience' is a song I find myself humming when I haven't listened to the CD in days. Catchy is not the word I'd use for this group and that's what sets them apart from song continously played on the radio, where the songs get stuck in your head in the most annoying ways. Haunting is better. A song comes to mind and you smile. It's a shame more people have not heard of The Pierces. I like having this little secret but I'd rather have them be a part of common consciousness. Absolutely perfect for any mood.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Unbelievable Songs Combined with Incredible Vocals,
By
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
I usually don't bother with music reviews, but these girls are worth the trouble. I figured I should do something to ensure they get another album out. I have a soft spot for female vocalists and well-written songs. This album is outstanding from start to finish. The songs are really unique - folksy, mellow stuff without any cliches, and almost put you in a trance. The harmony of their voices is remarkable. Their singing is on-par with Tori Amos, Sarah McLachlan, Shawn Colvin and Sheryl Crow. I would love to see them sing live.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Stunning songcraft and sibling harmony,
By Gizmola "gizmola" (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
I have to admit, I listened to this album relentlessly for a few months, and might still be listening to it in my car, if said car had not been stolen with said CD still inside. I subsequently bought all the Pierce albums I could, but this one remains my favorite of their releases.
Allison and Catherine Pierce grew up in Alabama, and depending on how much of their bio you want to believe, were home schooled by their parents: artist mother and musician father, and at one point were planning on careers as professional dancers. First lets get some superficial trivia out of the way: yes The Pierces are a strikingly atractive pair, and yes Catherine was at one time engaged to Albert Hammond, Jr of the Strokes. Yes someone at "Gossip Girl" really likes them and keeps featuring their songs. No I don't watch "Gossip Girl." The Pierces were first signed to Sony after a demo tape they'd made was circulated around Nashville by a friend, while the Pierce sisters were still attending college at Auburn university. Their debut album was released in 2000, to solid reviews, but was never marketed by the label. Despite the understandable disappointment of being lost in one of the numerous record company shakeups of the last 15 years, The Pierces toured, continued to write songs, and eventually relocated to the New Jersey and New York area. They eventually signed with Universal, and made Light of the Moon with producer Brian Sperber, who has an eclectic resume of work with artists as diverse as Ozzy Osborne, Dinosaur Jr, De La Soul, Moby and Staind. Light of the moon was released in 2005, and in my opinion represents the best of their three albums. The songs are excellent from start to finish, as the Pierce sisters had honed them during a period where they routinely performed their material live as an acoustic duo. From what I've read, The Pierces were extremely unhappy with their experience as young artists signed to two major record labels. Light of the Moon was released during this period, and the Pierces have claimed in interviews that they felt the album was "over produced". Purely as a listener, I feel it captures their often airy hook laden songs, and fluent harmonies, and presents this material in a manner that really opens it up. The musicianship is outstanding, and the album really grabs people's attention. Don't be surprised when you play it at a party, and people start asking you: "who is this?" Most of the subtle poetic lyrics on the album seem to be about relationships from a female perspective. They fit the melodies very well, and in many cases take a direct and candid approach that anchors their emotive vocal renditions, and lend the songs a feeling of real substance. Take for example, the album stand out "Save Me", reworked from a demo that received a degree of notice after it was featured in the TV series Roswell. The song's protagonist describes both fear and resignation over the abandonment she expects, once her lover discovers her checkered past. "There's a lot you don't know. And there's a lot I can't tell. Would you think I'm crazy If you knew me that well? Cause there's a lot you don't know But you say you won't go and I'd like to believe you." Or the heartbreaking plain spoken, and enigmatic "Louisa" with its charming touch of southern colloquialism "Don't you know you're my best friend? I've been havin such a hard time makin new ones I guess everything comes to an end I had you for a moment, now you're gone" The songs on Light of the Moon are beautifully rendered, with a consistent artistry and musicianship that should have been embraced by radio, but wasn't. The Pierces seem to be thriving now that they are Indie artists, but I personally didn't connect with the more experimental lo-fi direction they have taken with their latest album, Thirteen. For all the stripping down, their songwriting now seems to include more gimmickry. I guess what I like about the songs from "Light of the Moon" is their simplicity and earnestness, which ultimately gives them the staying power of the best classic pop songs. It's a shame to think that the Pierces don't look upon this album with pride or even the same degree of affection as many of their fans do. Perhaps given time they will.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Secret?,
By Matt30 (Missouri, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
How these two aren't mega stars, I'll never know. This is a great album, one catchy and likable song after another, the kind of music that sticks with you long after it's over. When I need to hear something beautiful with substance, it doesn't get much better than this.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
No filler! The last song will take your breath away!!,
By Leah "amazonregular" (NY State) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
Let me reiterate, the songs on their 3 albums have taken over my mp3 player. I have cultivated an incredible list of hundreds of songs, but I can't get past The Pierces to listen to anything else. I would compare them to Prince, not in style, but in sheer talent and variety. Just as he can go from a beautiful ballad to his more familiar, these girls go from pop to burlesque. I just don't have the words to describe, well, a picture paints a 1000 words, their songs must sing a million.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Bland and Boring Too,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
Could this possibly be the same group who created the absolutely brilliant "Thirteen Tales of Love and Revenge"? The Pierces' "Light of the Moon" is bland and boring, the tunes redundant and indistinguishable from their equally as boring and uninspired "The Pierces." I bought "Thirteen..." first and loved it so much I went searching for their other albums. Unfortunately, their other albums have turned out to be a bitter disappointment. If you like witty, snarky, snappy beats, stick with "Thirteen Tales of Love and Revenge" and forget the rest.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pretty Little Liars will truthfully love this,
This review is from: Light of the Moon (Audio CD)
The Pierces are clearly not coasting on their looks. Despite having a solid debut, avoiding the sophomore slump (with this album) and breaking free with the world-class third album Thirteen Tales of Love and Revenge, the girls have barely made a mark on the pop culture roadmap. Enter some angels who placed their songs on TV and finally, hopefully, people will take notice.
If you're reading this, you've decided to see if their back catalog is worth exploring. I've had this album for years and it never wears thin. I play it at least once a week. Absolutely beautiful harmonies buoyed by very strong, passionate melodies. Pretty singer/songwriters are often pretty boring, singing wispy forgettable paeans to long walks on the beach. The Pierces explore the complexities of the heart and the depth of the soul with meaty, honest, purely beautiful songs. The opening seconds of track one feel like the start of a David Lynch film, but you're soon bathed in the warm light of their lovely voices. Instead of disappearing into the ether, their melodies weave their way deep into your memory. If you're fans of The Watson Twins, Rilo Kiley, Amilia k. Spicer, Eleni Mandell or Neko Case - you will treasure this album. In a way, The Pierces are The Indigo Girls for the hipster indie rock crowd. A new EP will be released late in 2010 - can't wait. |
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Light of the Moon by The Pierces (Audio CD - 2005)
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