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The Brutalist Bricks
 
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The Brutalist Bricks

Ted Leo & The PharmacistsMP3 Music
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

Price: $9.49
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Album Savings: $4.37 compared to buying all songs

  • Original Release Date: March 8, 2010
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
 
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  Song Title Time Price  
Play   1. The Mighty Sparrow 2:37 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   2. Mourning In America 2:58 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   3. Ativan Eyes 4:22 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   4. Even Heroes Have To Die 3:45 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   5. The Stick 1:57 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   6. Bottled In Cork 3:18 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   7. Woke Up Near Chelsea 3:50 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   8. One Polaroid A Day 4:10 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   9. Where Was My Brain 2:18 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play 10. Bartomelo And The Buzzing Of Bees 3:21 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play 11. Tuberculoids Arrive In Hop 2:25 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play 12. Gimme The Wire 2:54 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play 13. Last Days 3:46 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play 14. Every Dream Deferred (Exclusive Track) 3:24 $0.99  Buy MP3 
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Fun, Politically Charged Rocker March 10, 2010
By C. Mack
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
For Ted Leo fans, "Shake the Sheets" is a good comparison starting point for "The Brutalist Bricks", both are straightforward political punk albums. Leo's foray into unabashed pop music on "Living With The Living" seems like a distant memory for most of this album as the guitars and political lyrics dominate.

The album opens up with the excellent opening single "The Mighty Sparrow." The song shows off Leo's singing abilities, manages to be catchy without an actual chorus and contains two false endings, all in a little over two and a half minutes. Next, "Mourning In America" is a blistering rocker in typical Leo fashion with the driving guitars leading the way. "Ativan Eyes" and "Even Heroes Have To Die" come next, both a little slower paced than the two opening tracks, but both are fun, if not terribly memorable. "The Stick" follows, it is as loud and fast as anything Leo has done, a power packed track coming in under two minutes.

The track that is perhaps in the "Living With The Living" mold more than any other on this album, "Bottle in Cork", is also, surprisingly, one of the best. The sound is light and breezy, reminding me of more than a few tracks off of their last album, and it is very enjoyable. The rest of the album continues switching between faster ("Woke Up Near Chelsea", "Where Was My Brain?") and slower ("One Polaroid A Day", "Bartomelo and the Buzzing of Bees"). Over this stretch, "Tuberculoids Arrive in Hop" deserves note for being an extremely slow, stripped-down piece with some interesting vocal parts, not typical Ted Leo at all. "Gimmie the Wire" is a great rocker, one of the standouts of the album. "Last Days" finishes things off, it is another strong tune on an album full of them.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Hardcore and the Political Punk June 19, 2010
Format:Audio CD
In his anthemic, chorus crushing song, "Waiting for the Great Leap Forward," Billy Bragg sings, "Mixing Pop and Politics he asks me what the use is/I offer him embarrassment and my usual excuses." Within the narrative of the song, the question is posed to Billy during the last call moments at a pub, and it carries a sense of drunk cynicism. It is also the question that Ted Leo, a musician deeply influenced by Billy Braggs punk and politics, has been posing to himself, both in song and interviews, for most of his career. Can an artist deliver the complications of politics through the streamlined joys of a pop melody? It's a question that every artist who trades in choruses and hooks that go straight for the mainline must ask. After all, if politics, as the philosopher once said, are an ideology that separates the individual from his or her real condition, then can the pop music, with its inherent brevity and disposability, perform the work of impacting a listener's consciousness enough to make these conditions known?

At times Ted Leo has suggested in interviews that pop music can't accomplish this kind of consciousness shifting, but, rather, all it can hope to do is preach to the converted. This tension between wanting to craft a political anthem within the confines of pop music shifts to the forefront of his latest album, The Brutalist Bricks, and is perhaps best exemplified by the song "Ativan Eyes." The song begins with a call to action, sprinkled with a little Karl Marx, but, before even the first chorus, abruptly shifts into the idioms of a love song: "The industry's out of touch / The means of production are now in the hands of the worker / But I just want to be touched by your expert hands.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the year's best already!! March 9, 2010
By MFP
Format:Audio CD
I thought Hearts of Oak was really great but the last few releases were lacking something, but not this one. This is a great listen all the way through and all the songs stand out by themselves. I compare Ted to a modern day Elvis Costello or Graham Parker and this could be his This Years Model or Squeezing Out Sparks.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Worth the wait April 10, 2010
Format:Audio CD
I'll admit I'm a big fan of TLRX and was patiently waiting for this release after 2007's Living with the Living. As with any favorite band you're always a little scared; will I like the new album? Will I be disappointed? Will it make me long for the classics? I can assure you that TLRX is back in great form with The Brutalist Bricks. The sound is not as experimental as on Living; there are no funk or reggae inspired tracks here but instead a more stripped down sound. Even though it seems Ted is going back to his roots the songs are fresh, inspired and as always meaningful.

The album is very balanced mixing in edgy punk sounds like "Mourning in America", "The Stick" and "Where Was My Brain" with Ted's classic Punk Pop like The "Mighty Sparrow", "Bottled in Cork", "Ativan Eyes" and "Bartomelo And The Buzzing Of Bees". Seriously, there's not a weak song on the album. "One Polaroid a Day" and "Even Heroes have to Die" are as catchy as I've ever heard. Polaroid is the first time I've heard Ted lower his voice instead of using his classic falsetto. You won't be disappointed in this album

A great live act too, TLRX just had a ton of energy on stage. While I was cheering when Ted went into "Me and Mia" and "Timorous Me" I was just excited to hear the new songs.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Catchy album
Ted Leo is an impressive musician to say the least. I've had the pleasure to see him in concert on several occasions, and the chance to talk with him on one of those occasions... Read more
Published 4 months ago by OatmealGuy
5.0 out of 5 stars I got a fever, and the only prescription is more angst driven rock
The opening line of The Mighty Sparrow - "when the cafe doors exploded" - aptly describes what is happening to you while you listen to Brutalist Bricks. Read more
Published 6 months ago by R. Fenimore
3.0 out of 5 stars An acquired taste, for sure
I purchased "The Brutalist Bricks" and "Shake the Sheets" because Ted Leo is going to open for Aimee Mann in our city this fall. Read more
Published 9 months ago by DIYguy
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant.
This band continues to grow with each effort. I hope they are around for a long long time. Head and shoulders above all the androgynous cloying crap we have to listen to today.
Published on April 23, 2010 by Alice Carey
5.0 out of 5 stars This is the album that made me "get" Ted Leo
Don't get me wrong, I've got lots of his other stuff and I liked it fine. But this is a compulsively listenable album that had me all the way, and whatever it is that makes the... Read more
Published on April 8, 2010 by Adam Dukovich
2.0 out of 5 stars Apathetic energy
2 1/2

While not lacking in momentum, BB suffers from Leo's increasingly generic writing (Bartomelo And The Buzzing Of Bees is the only track that fully reminds me of his... Read more
Published on March 29, 2010 by IRate
4.0 out of 5 stars Ted Leo and the Pharmacists - Get the chemistry right, March 13, 2010
Its called paying your dues and Ted Leo and the Pharmacists have done it in spades. Since 1999 various incarnations of this band led by Mr Leo from Washington DC have rocked around... Read more
Published on March 13, 2010 by Red on Black
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