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Matt Pond PA

Matt Pond PA Album: “Green Fury”

Matt Pond PA Album: “Green Fury”
Album Information :
Title: Green Fury
Release Date:2002-01-22
Type:Unknown
Genre:Rock, Adult Alternative
Label:
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:644110004864
Track Listing :
1 Canadian Song Video
2 Measure 3 Video
3 Neighbor's New Yard Video
4 City Plan Video
5 Promise the Bite Video
6 Silence Video
7 This Is Montreal Video
8 Part of the Woods
9 New Part of Town
10 Jefferson Video
11 Crickets Video
12 It Becomes Night Video
13 Copper Mine Video
Review - AMG :
Capturing a mood caught somewhere between alert and energized and blissful, this release from the group known as Matt Pond PA serves as an introduction to confessional songwriting that shows that it need not all be self-indulgent. It's a detached record and yet it is earnest. For all of its heart-on-a-sleeve acoustic guitar strumming, there are string-laden majestic moments that manage to have a wider scope. Tracks like "City Plan" and "Promise the Bite" alternate between being spaced-out wonders and pop music gems. It's not that Matt Pond is necessarily that expressive as a singer, but in terms of expressing a mood -- melancholy laced with less than a tinge of sincerity -- this is where the record succeeds. There are recognizable indie rock elements here, but they are dolled up in tasteful orchestration. It's the sort of record that lends itself to accusations of being Baroque or grand in scope, but it is both of those things tactfully and humbly -- and not with any lavish adherence to any sort of pre-established code. It may be a Baroque sound, but it is not a revisionist sound. The Green Fury is somewhere between the Shins and the Cure's Disintegration, which -- as you might be able to guess -- is not a bad place to be. ~ Jon Pruett, All Music Guide
Review - :
Capturing a mood caught somewhere between alert and energized and blissful, this release from the group known as {$Matt Pond PA} serves as an introduction to confessional songwriting that shows that it need not all be self-indulgent. It's a detached record and yet it is earnest. For all of its heart-on-a-sleeve acoustic guitar strumming, there are string-laden majestic moments that manage to have a wider scope. Tracks like {&"City Plan"} and {&"Promise the Bite"} alternate between being spaced-out wonders and {\pop} music gems. It's not that {$Matt Pond} is necessarily that expressive as a singer, but in terms of expressing a mood -- melancholy laced with less than a tinge of sincerity -- this is where the record succeeds. There are recognizable {\indie rock} elements here, but they are dolled up in tasteful orchestration. It's the sort of record that lends itself to accusations of being {\Baroque} or grand in scope, but it is both of those things tactfully and humbly -- and not with any lavish adherence to any sort of pre-established code. It may be a {\Baroque} sound, but it is not a revisionist sound. {^The Green Fury} is somewhere between {$the Shins} and {$the Cure}'s {^Disintegration}, which -- as you might be able to guess -- is not a bad place to be. ~ Jon Pruett, All Music Guide