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White Wilderness [Amazon MP3 Exclusive Version]
 
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White Wilderness [Amazon MP3 Exclusive Version]

John VandersliceMP3 Music
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

Price: $9.90
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  • Original Release Date: January 24, 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. Sea Salt 4:22 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   2. Convict Lake 3:44 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   3. White Wilderness 3:53 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   4. The Piano Lesson 3:42 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   5. After It Ends 2:20 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   6. Overcoat 3:20 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   7. Alemany Gap 2:40 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   8. English Vines 3:20 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play   9. 20K 4:26 $0.99  Buy MP3 
Play 10. Walkabout (Atlas Sound Cover) [Amazon MP3 Exclusive] 3:39 $0.99  Buy MP3 
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Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
(6)
4.5 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:MP3 Music|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a fantastic album - I have been listening to it and awaiting the release for months. However, I need to caution big JV fans before they jump on this to listen closely and play through all the samples. I'll immediately say that this should not be the first JV album you buy. Over the course of his career I always thought I loved his music mostly because of the songwriting, but hearing this made me realize how much his songs change when taken out of the context that his unbelievable production style provides. If you can get behind the orchestra's sound and the really unique way they arrange and interpret his work, go for it. This is a great batch of songs and a well executed album. I pull it out from time to time to change things up, but it remains one of his albums that I listen to less. I have to give this group and this release credit for a really cool perspective on his songs and successfully filling some pretty big shoes in terms of the sound that usually supports his songwriting.

I've just listened to it again and take back everything I said that wasn't totally positive. Buy it now and get a pretty cool cover as an Amazon bonus.

By the way, whether you like this album or not, look for a video of him performing "Too Much Time" with the Magik Magik orchestra. Incredible.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Strings Help the Voice Soar January 28, 2011
Format:Audio CD
It took me maybe, I don't know, maybe all of 12 seconds to love White Wilderness, the eighth proper album from the analog-recording whiz from Portland, Oregon. Recorded with The Magik Magik Orchestra and arranged by Minna Choi, White is the by-far best produced (and most ambitious) Vanderslice record to date, sounding big and beautiful at every turn. While Vando has always been an interesting songwriter, producer and arranger, by working with Choi and the MMO, he's really stepped his game up, creating what is - in this writer's opinion - his by-far best ever record. Yeah, I'm gushing. This is a gusher sort of a record - the kind you e-mail friends about.

After self-releasing a stellar EP titled Green Grow the Rushes late last year, Vanderslice (who recently moved from the Seattle-based Barsuk Records to the Indiana-based Dead Oceans, most recently releasing 2009's great Romanian Names) decided to go for it all, quietly recording the endlessly grand (yet often fragile sounding) White while the indie world celebrated simple records by bands like Best Coast, Wavves and No Age. Now, still new label hoisting him high, he's crafted one of the best winter-season records I've heard since those early Badly Drawn Boy discs. While the mood here shifts around quite a bit, the vibe is always somber (and epic), most likely due to Vanderslice's vocal style (always the focus) and the consistent use of string arrangement and dramatic swells. If you're somehow not already familiar with this indie mainstay, think Andrew Bird, XTC, Beulah and, if your ears are more of the mainstream pedigree, Owl City (or so I'm told). All that said, this is very original music that is hard to compare to anything else out right now.

The grandiose "The Piano Lesson," however, does remind instantly of both Sufjan Stevens and Shugo Tokumaru, arranged in a way that separates Vanderslice from most of the indie pack, coming off like something you'd expect a master like Brian Wilson to listen to on an off day. The overall vibe here is elegance, Choi, MMO and Vanderslice delivering nine fully-baked songs in about a half an hour that are delicately crafted and meticulously arranged and executed. And, of course, there are Vanderslice's forever underrated lyrics, which hold the whole mess together, front to back.

Standouts include opener "Sea Salt," which moves back and forth from minimalist composition to grand string arrangement. The title track, another instant highlight, features little more than Vanderslice's voice, his piano and strings. No guitar, no drums, not even a bass. This approach allows Vanderslice's vocals, here more fragile than usual, to really shine. No bad songs in sight, I'm finding it hard to pick favorites from this very solid set of songs. Though this is a mostly accessible listen, "Convict Lake," I suppose, would be the closest thing the record has to a radio single, the album playing through in a 60s style AOR fashion, passing quickly and memorably as one solid piece of work.

The result is the album Vanderslice has been trying to make for years - a breakthrough album that, theoretically, reminds very much of Andrew Bird's Armchair Apocrypha, a 2007 album made for sophisticated ears that, somehow, made Bird a big name indie artist. Will White Wilderness do the same for John Vanderslice, another songwriter/producer/multi-instrumentalist who has been working hard for over a decade? Well, maybe. It should. It should because it's lean and mean and far more accessible than the Bird record. But who knows. Indie music being forever ficklie, White Wilderness could just be another record that chips away at listeners, adding to and maintaining a fanbase for Vanderslice. But, damn, listening to this heavily orchestrated pop record, I can't help but holler and cheer, hoping it's the one that finally breaks through.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars John Vanderslice never disappoints January 24, 2011
Format:MP3 Music
Mr. Vanderslice does it again. Top-notch refreshing song writing as always. He has this great ability to give you a completely original song that is deceptively simple, yet very complex. For me the best part of his music is that it allows to breath. The other many fans of JV know what I'm talking about it. Now I want to see how he's going to pull of these great multi layered songs that were backed up by an accomplished and talented orchestra.
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