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Oh! Gravity.
 
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Oh! Gravity.

Switchfoot
4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (80 customer reviews) More about this product

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Oh! Gravity. + Nothing Is Sound + The Beautiful Letdown
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (December 26, 2006)
  • Original Release Date: December 26, 2006
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Sony
  • ASIN: B000KC6T0S
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (80 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #6,855 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #68 in  Music > Christian & Gospel > Christian Rock
    #68 in  Music > Christian & Gospel > Christian Alternative

Listen to Samples

To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that sample. Visit our audio help page for more information.
 
1. Oh! Gravity.
2. American Dream
3. Dirty Second Hands
4. Awakening
5. Circles
6. Amateur Lovers
7. Faust, Midas, And Myself
8. Head Over Heels (In This Life)
9. Yesterdays
10. Burn Out Bright
11. 4:12
12. Let Your Love Be Strong

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
With Oh! Gravity, the San Diego-based modern rock act delivers their best album in years, one that fully reconciles their (Christian) faith with their (considerable) talent. It's diverse but not overly so, and while the production work of veteran Tim Palmer (U2, Tears for Fears) helps provide a radio-friendly sheen atop everything, it's actually their least compromised/mainstream sounding record since the group left the indie scene. From the chiming, revved-up, anthemic title song, which pairs compressed vocals with distorted guitars, to the moody and mildly schizophrenic single "Dirty Second Hands," this album is loud and dirty, the lyrics are thoughtful and plaintive. Lead singer/songwriter Jon Foreman clearly questions the meaning of the band's success, and the role they play in the scheme of things: "Like a puppet on a monetary string/Maybe we've been caught singing/Red, white, blue, and green/But that ain't my American dream." If only Switchfoot's conscience could be implanted in the bodies of other modern rock acts! The world might not necessarily be a better place, but the radio certainly would be. --Mike McGonigal

Switchfoot Pics
   

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Nothing Is Sound

New Way to Be Human

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The Early Years: 1997-2000

Switchfoot--Live in San Diego (DVD)



Product Description
Oh! Gravity, the highly anticipated sixth album from the San Diego rock band Switchfoot, contains 12 new tracks written by the band and produced by Tim Palmer (Tin Machine, Pearl Jam, The Cure, Mother Love Bone, U2) and Switchfoot with Grammy-winning executive producer Steve Lillywhite. The new album expands Switchfoot's sonic palette while at the same time dealing with certain social issues. On songs like "Dirty Second Hands," Jon Foreman sings of the dehumanization that comes with technology. Other politically motivated tracks include "Oh! Gravity." the title track's generational appeal for love, peace and understanding, "American Dream," with its biting truth, "Awakening," about trying to recover the innocence of a child in the midst of an ever-harsher reality, the sawing alt-country of "Head Over Heels," the exotic instrumentation and Middle Easternflavor of "Circles," the REM-esque pulse of "4:12," the lush Brit-pop melodies of "Yesterdays," the Echo and the Bunnymen/Smiths influenced "Burn Out Bright" and Motown sound of "Amateur Lovers."

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Customer Reviews

80 Reviews
5 star:
 (49)
4 star:
 (17)
3 star:
 (10)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (80 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Best Kind of Surprise, February 14, 2007
By R. Taylor "dcdude" (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I'm an older (almost, gulp, 40) pop, indie, alternative music fan who came across a great pop song on the radio titled "Stars." Bought it on iTunes, enjoyed it. By this band called "Switchfoot."

I recently saw a new album by Switchfoot on Amazon (released on my birthday, Dec. 26th!) and thought, what the heck, let's see if there are any good "Stars"-like songs on it. Digressing, I appreciate solid albums (yeah, 10-12 songs long) that don't force you to skip songs and provide an emotional ride (haven't had many of those since the peak of U2, R.E.M., Coldplay, Radiohead, etc.). To say the new Switchfoot album was a complete surprise is the understatement of the decade. And then I found out they were a "Christian" band (I love labels) and I was like, really? Don't care one way or the other, because this is an awesome rock/pop whatever-you-want-to-label-it album.

Partial credit must go to Steve Lillywhite - he has this knack of getting the most pop (yeah, I like pop songs - sue me) out of rock bands, while keeping the emotional strengths and solid musicianship. Look at Dave Matthews Band - their first three albums (love em or hate em) are incredible pop rock albums with emotion to boot. Nothing they have done since ditching Mr. Lillywhite have been nearly as good. So, even though I have not heard Switchfoot's catalog, I must give credit in part to Mr. Lillywhite for the incredibly pleasant surprise that is "Oh! Gravity."

Enough blathering - every song has something interesting about it, whether it be soaring guitars (the build up to and chorus of "Head Over Heels"), awesome singing (screaming in "Oh! Gravity" and "Awakening"), heartfelt emotion ("Head Over Heels" and "Yesterdays"), kick-a** rhythms (the whole album) and interesting musical touches throughout ("Dirty Second Hands" "Faust" and my favorite, "4:12"). The lyrics and emotion feel honest, not forced, and definitely provide some solid messages for this time (excess - bad, having a heart - good). And while its sounds like a mid-90's song by Gutterball (look it up), "Amatuer Lovers" rocks out and places a giddy smile on my face every time I hear it.

I highly recommend this album - you may not rate every song a five out of five, but you have to appreciate a rock band that can do a lot of different things interestingly and well without pretention and with passion. Congratulations to Switchfoot - you have a hard core new fan. I can only imagine how fun it would be to hear these songs live...

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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Signal of New Things, December 27, 2006
By Eric Wilson "novelist" (Nashville, TN United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
I first saw Switchfoot when they were riding on the underground success of their single "Chem 6A." They were young, full of energy, playful, yet with serious undertones to their lyrics. That seriousness became more evident with each of the following albums. They showed maturity and skill that went beyond the average garage band, and "Learning to Breathe" proved to me that this was a group that would rise to the top. Then, with "Nothing is Sound," their darker side became ponderous. I liked the album, but understood why many revolted.

"Oh! Gravity" doesnt' find Switchfoot backing down from their sound or style, but it does show a leap forward in musical texture and in lyrics that question without floundering in the depths too long. The more I listen, the more I find to like. Songs that didn't grab me at first are now the ones I spin through again.

If the artsy simplicity of the cover isn't a signal of new things, then be prepared for a group that is taking it to another level. From guitar riffs, to vocals, to layers of sound, this is an album that belongs on the list of the year's best.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Switchfooot delivers a fresh, ambitious and thoroughly solid product, December 26, 2006
It's been three years since Switchfoot burst onto the mainstream scene with "The Beautiful Letdown", a record which went double-platinum and produced multiple radio hits, namely the rock anthems "Meant To Live" and "Dare You To Move". In 2005, Switchfoot followed up with "Nothing Is Sound", a noticeably darker and moody project which, strangely enough, was recorded entirely on the road despite the tight-sheen finish of the production. NIS received more mixed reviews, some criticizing it for being too "safe" and too reminiscent of the breakthrough TBL. While I rather enjoyed their latest outing, Nothing Is Sound was not very accessible: the dark subject matter grows thin on the listener after a time. While it's a great album to "rediscover" if you are in a fitting mood, it's not something you can listen to at any time.

With "Oh! Gravity", listeners concerned with predictability or accessibility can check their worries at the door. In their latest release, Switchfoot thunders back with a product that is at once ambitious and friendly. The new sound is a fusion of the upbeat and quirky "old Switchfoot" (pre-TBL days) with the hard rocking and existential pondering of the latter days, the result being a perfect blend of familiar rock with indie experimentation. Lead singer and songwriter Jon Foreman hones his already noteworthy craft by providing fresh looks at Switchfoot's Modus operandi: offering thought-provoking looks at (and criticisms of) materialism, consumerism, and complacency while maintaining a spiritual (though never preachy) bent. Foreman further flexes his creative muscles by introducing some fresh concepts into the songs. The title track, for instance, relies on a clever apostrophe with Foreman asking the physical law of gravity why its universal cohesiveness doesn't hold true in the social arena. Other notables include the characterization of the clock as an adversarial thief with "dirty second hands" in the song so aptly named. And Foreman once again proves that he is knowledgeable when he in one track compares the age-old tales of Dr. Faustus and King Midas to his own life experience.

Musically, Oh! Gravity takes Switchfoot to new heights. The band strikes the perfect balance of diversity; you'd be hard-pressed to find one track that sounds just like another. I don't find it appropriate to go through and rate each song on a record like this. Switchfoot successfully employs a variety of musical styles, including hard-rock, punk-rock, country twang, Britpop, psychedelic, and even Motown. Some tracks even combine styles to form a very unique outcome (i.e. Dirty Second Hands, 4:12) Yet Foreman has repeatedly stated that this record is about leaving all expectations behind and putting together the most honest product possible; pitch and theory take a backseat to feeling. Here, the band succeeds on sending the listeners through a rollercoaster of emotions:

The title track is a raucous 2 minute and 30 second release of fireball energy. American Dream exhibits hard-rocking passion. Dirty Second Hands unleashes the dobro and toys with the rhythm, creating an absorbing and hypnotic sound. Awakening is a throw-out-your-arms, larger-than-life anthem of hope. Circles is exotic and exquisite. Amateur Lover is just FUN. Faust is an engrossing story-song, ranging from soft to hard in just the right moments. Head Over Heels is a poetic love song. Yesterdays is sorrowful, lamenting the death of a loved one. Burn Out Bright, as guitarist Andrew Shirley has called it, is a "roll-down-the-windows" romp of meaning (with killer riffs). 4:12 is different...you have to hear it to really grasp it. And Let Your Love Be Strong, the closing ballad, is beyond my words to describe.

What makes this record stand out above others? I point to Switchfoot's ability to create a thoroughly SOLID record, as virtually every song is finely crafted and worth listening to. I don't believe it judging artists by their singles, but rather their finished products. Does this album have any songs that will climb the charts and surpass "Meant To Live" or "Dare You To Move" in terms of popularity? Not likely. Does the album contain tracks that are just as good, if not better? Absolutely. Though this record may not contain the same tailored-for-radio material that contributed to the band's breakthrough (there are, however, some songs I can see being successful on the airwaves), the collective effort is undoubtedly the best yet by the fellas from San Diego.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Oh Gravity!
This is a great cd, I was actually surprised at how much I have enjoyed it. I didn't expect it to be that great, but it is a great cd.
Published 3 months ago by Joshua Dawson

3.0 out of 5 stars CD - "Oh Gravity", by Switchfoot
Thought the CD was wasn't quite as good as previous CD's of theirs, but did have some good tracks that I enjoyed.
Published 5 months ago by Hrothgar

3.0 out of 5 stars Average effort from Switchfoot
I would have to say this album is average at best. I will say though, if you ever get a chance to see Switchfoot live do it. They are incredible in concert.
Published 5 months ago by Mike True

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Rock Album
I first heard this CD when it first came out, and wasn't too impressed. I was still digging their "Learning To Breathe" album most at that point; Oh! Read more
Published 6 months ago by Jonathan Mahoney

2.0 out of 5 stars Oh Gravity Shoots Straight Down
The Beautiful Letdown was fresh and new. Nothing Is Sound hit you even harder with some fresh sounds and inspiring lyrics (mostly, some of the songs on there were a little dry)... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Stephen Barry Tell Em

5.0 out of 5 stars Freakin' Amazing!!!
Wow. You can never go wrong with Switchfoot. From the moment, I heard the sounds of Dirty Second Hands when it was released as the first single of this record, I knew this record... Read more
Published 9 months ago by devildog16

3.0 out of 5 stars My LEAST favorite Switchfoot album : (
Switchfoot has been my favorite band for several years now. Out of their six major albums, this one is by far my LEAST favorite. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Mark

5.0 out of 5 stars THE BEST!
This is Switchfoot's best CD yet! The songs carry you through the CD and are as cleverly written as ever. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Jen Slothower

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesomeness
I'm surprised that The Beautiful Letdown has a higher rating; Oh! Gravity is a LOT better. Theres a lot more energy put into the songs in this album. Read more
Published 15 months ago by J.D. Realms

5.0 out of 5 stars The hits keep on coming!
Switchfoot is definately my favorite band. And this cd has not dissappointed. Though, The Beautiful Letdown will always be my favorite of their cds. Read more
Published 15 months ago by -Concrete Girl-

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Buy from Switchfoot.com! 1 January 2007
Solid Album, not their best 1 January 2007
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Oh! Gravity.
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