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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Such Special Freaks., July 29, 2005
Apparently around for the last eight years, Caesars have remained a hidden Swedish secret until now. Caesars Palace in their native country, but Caesars here due to the Las Vegas casino's right to the name, this band revives The Beatles, The Kinks, The Who, The Zombies, The Byrds, Badfinger and The Bay City Rollers all mixed into a great alternative pop confection. While "Jerk It Out", a song from an earlier album, is strategically placed to capitalize on its recent inclusion in an I-pod commercial, the rest of the album is just as strong.
In fact, this is the first band in a long while that I have heard that captures a free-for-all fun sound much like Smash Mouth did with "Walking On The Sun" back in 1997. The lyrics here are filled with great traditional themes of alienation, isolation, desperation and desolation. The album opens with a great one-two punch with "Spirit" and "It's Not The Fall That Hurts", both of which could be hits. "Jerk It Out" is a great get up and dance track while the title track is a melodic ode of losers hoping for a second chance. "Your Time Is Near" captures an almost Mamas and Papas "California Dreaming" vibe, and the cd ends with more potential hits with "Winter Song", "We Got To Leave", "Soulchaser" and "Good And Gone". The band utilizes unusual instruments such as the farfisa, philicorda and yttling piano reminiscent of Del Shannon's hit "Runaway".
All of this adds up to a near perfect cd that sets itself apart almost entirely from the rest of today's music. As of my review, I see only ten other reviews here which is disheartening, but perhaps this band will still catch on in America. Check them out!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Album - Well Worth The Money!, January 8, 2006
Caesar's Palace, The Caesars, The Twelve Caesars - they're all the same group. They go by different names depending on location - Twelve Caesars in most of Scandinavia, The Caesars in North America, and Caesar's Palace in Sweden, most of europe, and the rest of the world.
They currently have five albums:
39 Minutes of Bliss (as The Caesars)
Paper Tigers (as The Caesars)
Youth Is Wasted On The Young (as The Twelve Caesars)
Cherry Kicks (as Caesar's Palace)
Love For The Streets (as Caesar's Palace)
I hope this helps clarify some things.
I give EVERY SINGLE ALBUM five out of five stars - great vocals, great leads, great base, great melodies, great everything. If you like rock, don't pass this up.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Get Down With The Caesars, August 2, 2005
This is not a heavy piece of work - i.e. Wilco or Radiohead or anything along those lines - and I mean no aspersion in saying so. There is a time for brooding, for sorrow, for walking around your empty, post-party apartment on a morbid partial patrol, shaking the discarded bottles for tasty dregs. The Caesars are not the band to provide the soundtrack for these moments; the Caesars are the band for the party.
As a rock record, Paper Tigers is uncommonly funky, which is maybe why it can withstand with so many plays. Even the ubiquitous "Jerk It Out" single wears well. The hook is so irresistible, and so weirdly timeless, along the lines of "Dirty Water" or some other garage rock classic. There's a lot more here, though - "Soulchaser", "We Got To Leave," etc. - all of it catchy and effortless in the same way, but never going soft, never losing the rock edge.
From a lyrical standpoint, I admit that they're not doing rocket science ("it's not the fall that hurts/it's when you hit the ground"), but I don't think they claim to be.
For fans of Fountains of Wayne, OK Go, Hot Hot Heat, and other finely crafted, hook-heavy rock, the Caesars should an appealing new option.
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