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Together We're Heavy (W/Dvd)
 
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Together We're Heavy (W/Dvd)

The Polyphonic SpreeAudio CD
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (59 customer reviews)

Price: $14.85 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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MP3 Download, 10 Songs, 2004 $9.49  
Audio CD, 2004 $14.85  
Vinyl, 2004 --  
DVD Audio, 2004 --  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Section 11 (We Sound Amazed) 8:32$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. Section 12 (Hold Me Now) 4:30$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. Section 13 (Diamonds/ Devotion To Majesty) 4:55$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Section 14 (Two Thousand Places) 5:19$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Section 15 (Ensure Your Reservation) 1:39$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Section 16 (One Man Show) 4:58$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Section 17 (Suitcase Calling) 8:47$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. Section 18 (Everything Starts At The Seam) 1:54$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. Section 19 (When The Fool Becomes A King)10:37Album Only
listen10. Section 20 (Together We're Heavy) 6:30$0.99 Buy Track


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (July 13, 2004)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Hollywood Records
  • ASIN: B0002IQ1QC
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  DVD Audio  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (59 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #31,051 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 

Customer Reviews

59 Reviews
5 star:
 (26)
4 star:
 (14)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (11)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (59 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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68 of 73 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Sing, Sing a Song, December 21, 2004
By 
This review is from: Together We're Heavy (W/Dvd) (Audio CD)
Whatever happened to the concept album? It seemed in the 70s and 80s that you couldn't escape them, that every band with any pretension of artistry released one, if not more, and this fueled the creation and increasing importance of Album Oriented Rock radio, which often featured special shows that would play these discs in their entirety (usually carefully preceded and followed by enough silence that home tapers could be sure of getting a clean copy in an early example of file sharing). Rock operas like the Who's Tommy and Pink Floyd's The Wall shared the time with thematically connected collections like Alan Parson's I, Robot. Songs ranged out of the perfect pop three-minute mark to sometimes covering entire sides of LPs, like Jethro Tull's Thick as a Brick, or would merge seamlessly from one track to the next such as Joe Jackson's Blaze of Glory. Such grandiosity seemed to go the way of the dodo in the 90s, as grunge and indie rock strove to return to rock's roots in the 1950s, as if Bill Haley and Jerry Lee Lewis were fighting back against Sgt. Pepper. A few bands, now labeled "art rock" or progressive, continued to hold the candle, but radio ditched them for the new kids on the block.

Proving that things always go in cycles, The Polyphonic Spree act like they've been handed Sgt. Pepper's baton, sounding like nothing more than the second coming of that era-Beatles combined with the song structures of Yes or early Genesis and a larger band than Funkadelic at its most extreme. Their first album, The Beginning Stages of..., was extremely uneven: a series of demos that proved the concept of 20-plus members creating music in a communal style was viable and not a disaster. Released basically unedited and unproduced, it shows glimpses of possibilities, the best moments being in the song "Night and Day" that fully harkened back to concept albums of the past with its enigimatic story and alternating passages of whisper-quiet sweet melodies and bombastic fanfares. Based on that album, word-of-mouth and some high-profile festival appearances (including a personal invite from David Bowie, himself not a stranger to outre concepts, for an early English gig), the Polyphonic Spree landed a contract with a larger label and enough money and time to furnish the second album with a production to match their vision.

Together We're Heavy actually continues the themes brought forward in the first album. In fact, the first song is titled "Section 11 (We Sound Amazed)," indicating that the ten songs of The Beginning Stages of... were sections one through ten. The lyrics are optimistic to an Candide-like extreme, celebrations of life and its possibilities. They worship growth, nature, the sun, and dreams. The sounds match this positivism with bright horn sections, tinkling keyboards, flowing harp sections and ethereal flute intersections.

The group itself is the brainchild of one man, Tim DeLaughter, a veteran of the more usual rock four-piece, a band called Tripping Daisy. In 1999, his friend and band guitarist Wes Berggren died to a drug overdose, which seemed to have initiated a road to Damascus conversion for DeLaughter, who emerged next on a musical stage with his three former bandmates, his wife, and nine other friends, calling themselves The Polyphonic Spree. Since then, they've added another ten members, made robes their on-stage garment (initially white with individual color fringes, now with one piece solid colors, so that on stage they look like a living, moving rainbow), and become one of the most talked about new acts of the 21st century. The robes and celebratory aspect of their music have led to some naïve questions about whether they constitute a cult, met with laughter by DeLaughter, who instead compares the group and their energetic stage show to a theatrical event (think Godspell or Hair).

While the songs on Together We're Heavy can be listened to individually (in fact, my first experience with it was a single on a sampler disc in Paste magazine), listening to all ten straight will take you back twenty or thirty years. DeLaughter's slightly whiny lead vocals resemble Roger Waters, even if his lyrics are the antithesis of Waters' angst, despair and loathing, while the music harkens to Genesis' style right after Peter Gabriel's departure. The repetition of bits and pieces owes as much to 70s progressive rock as it does to the sampling and mixing of the 90s, and, like their stage show, infuses the listener with a silly grin on their face. I'm fondest of the way that the Spree incorporates a multitude of voices in a choir-like backing for DeLaughter (something prefigured in, for example, the kids choir of "Another Brick in the Wall part 2").

I like this much more than I ever would have expected, even though I consider my fondness for art rock predisposes me to it. I guess I thought I had grown out of that phase of my listening life, but there's something about the Spree's version of it--be it a perceived genuineness behind their eternal optimism or how they have updated the concept with current production values--that never fails to elicit a silly smile on my face. I urge you to give "Section 12 (Hold Me Now)" a try and see if you don't also find yourself humming along and pulling out the incense burner.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Heavy, man, July 15, 2004
This review is from: Together We're Heavy (W/Dvd) (Audio CD)
Maybe they should have called it "The Middle Stages Of...," since this CD literally picks up where the last one left off. Feel-good band Polyphonic Spree are in fine form on their sophomore CD, "Together We're Heavy" -- it presents pretty much the same sound as in their debut, but more relaxed, polished and panoramic than before.

A chorus of very faint voices and a harp explode into an orchestral psychedelic roar. And that's just the first minute of the rippling opener "Section 11 (A Long Day Continues/We Sound Amazed)." They're on more solid footing with the guiltily upbeat "Section 12 (Hold Me Now)," the quivery poppy ballad "Section 13 (Diamonds/Mild Devotion To Majesty)" and the string-laden "Section 15 (Ensure Your Reservation)."

The Polyphonic Spree manage to expand their horizons a little with the startlingly catchy "Section 14 (Two Thousand Places)" and the bouncy "Section 18 (Everything Starts At The Seam)." The climax of it all is "Section 19 (When The Fool Becomes A King)," a sprawling 10-minute epic that barely avoids being bloated by constantly changing song styles.

Together We're Heavy proves the old saying about how if it ain't broke, don't fix it. The Polyphonic Spree won their fans with their psychedelic feel-good pop, not to mention songs about how the "trees wanna grow," and assuring you that the world is a nice place and that "everything... will be fine." Here, they stick with that formula -- they just smooth out the sound and make the music a bit richer and deeper.

The saggiest point would be the opener, which overstays its welcome by about three minutes. But after that, things even out nicely. The instrumentation has a lushness and richness that is rarely seen in most music -- lots of piano, the occasional guitar, swollen strings, ghostly synth, some harp and, of course, lots of horns. Even if the don't-worry-be-happy songwriting is too sugary for you, the panoramic sweeps of swirling melody will keep you happy.

The feel-good lyrics are still EXTREMELY simple, somewhere between a complex lullaby and a simple pop song. Not to mention perky. "Stranger to the sun/you see the light!" the chorus announces over and over in the penultimate song. But they do expand on their songwriting, as they do in the more melancholy story-song "Section 16 (One Man Show)."

The Polyphonic Spree refine and reflect on "Together We're Heavy," but don't lose the swirling orchestral medleys and upbeat tone that make people like them. Fun and upbeat.

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27 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Polyphonic Spree Are For People Who Like Music, August 20, 2004
This review is from: Together We're Heavy (W/Dvd) (Audio CD)
Years ago, I was under the impression that I didn't like the Beatles. Then I got over it.
Having enjoyed both Polyphonic Spree records and attending a recent show of theirs, I can now honestly say that the Spree is one of those rare bands that, if you see them live and you don't have a good time, I feel sorry for you. If the sight of 25 blissed-out, multicolored-robe-clad musicians jumping around like a dancing rainbow and pretending to watch a sunrise as if they drank the Kool-Aid an hour ago doesn't turn you into a giggling retard, I don't know what will. The Spree have an ethereal quality--performing in front of an enormous banner emblazoned with the word "HOPE" in simple block lettering--at times they look like a bunch of friendly aliens who landed on our planet to teach us a thing or two. If this creeps you out, get over it.
The reason i'm going on about the live show is that I don't think this or their other album can be properly enjoyed without imagining the music in the context of their live show. Fortunately, for the uninitiated, Together We're Heavy comes with a bonus DVD, containing one particularly frenzied performance at a small club in Chicago, and one performance at a stadium in Tokyo, where, amazingly, the band manages to win over a crowd of thousands.
Watch the DVD, or, if you're still skeptical, go to www.thepolyphonicspree.com, under "video" and watch one of their live clips. Then listen to this album. It really is a knockout. The orchestrations, the childlike voices, the psychadelic interludes...it's totally satisfying for anybody who likes music. Listen to it when you're down, and it will bring you back up. Listen to it when you're up, and it will take you higher. The world needs this defiantly happy band, and with this album, they prove that they're here to stay.
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The Polyphonic Spree's album Together We're Heavy was produced by Eric Drew Feldman.
Tim DeLaughter, Brian Teasley, Mark Pirro, St. Vincent, and Annie Clarkhave been a member of The Polyphonic Spree.

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