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Stands with Spiritual Machines at OLP's very best. Jul 29, 2008 All the idiots posting one star reviews because of a bad CD rom feature need to delete or change their reviews. It's a bad logic kick in OLP's face to one star this Masterpiece over a CD rom mistake.
Every song on this album shines. The style is a completely new turn for OLP, but very good. Think of the melodic genius of Spiritual Machines mixed with the awesomeness of tracks like Annie and A story about a girl. If you're looking for their Hello Oskar or Naveed side you won't find it here, but you will find something special. Raine has never sounded so good as he does here.
Beutiful. Absolutely Beautiful. I suggest anyone out there reading this review go ahead and send in complaints about all the 1 star reviews that complain about the CD rom feature and don't genuinely have a problem with the music. People search Amazon and look at customer averages. Lets do our part and give this one at least a 4.5 average. Even if it's not your very favorite, this album does justice to the Our Lady Peace cataloge.
I really hope they release their next album soon.
Raine...Raine...Raine... Feb 20, 2008 This CD isn't terrible, instead it is a terrible waste of talent. Raine Maida has one of the best voices in modern rock. Unfortunately he forgot to bring it to the recording sessions. His vocals usually soar with the support of some clever guitar riffs. This disc is chock full of the riffs, but lacks the vocals. The only exception to this is "Angels Losing Sleep". This is an amazing track which opens the cd with a bang. After completing the disc, though, you find that the track is horribly misplaced and belongs on one of their better, previous discs. It is not like this disc is terrible (I mean I did give it two stars, not one), but rather I feel as though it is a waste of talent. Let's use this as a learning experience for next time boys.
OLP's Sgt. Pepper's Jul 20, 2006 I first got this album when it first came out around a year ago. During this past year I have had a chance to completely digest the album and have come to the conclusion that this is Our Lady Peace's masterpiece. Every single song is a jewel. There is not a boring spot on this album. Blending great musicianship with scathing political commentary OLP has made an album that will definitely go down in history as one of their best. Standing out on the album are the songs "Angels/Losing/Sleep", "Don't Stop", and "World on a String".
7 of 7 found the following review helpful:
This review is not intended to comment on the disc itself or the company that issued it Dec 14, 2005 When you realize that a band like Our Lady Peace has been together for over a decade, it should make sense that they just will not sound the same. No band in existance has maintained the same sound album to album, and if they have, they didn't do very well. People like change, growth, maturity. They like different topics, they like seeing their fallen heroes rise again, they like seeing bad guys getting what's coming to them, and they like seeing those that once stood offstage finally take charge of their destiny and make themselves heard.
Throughout their career, Our Lady Peace has always fallen short of the explosion in the American market that so many Canadians get. They are HUGE in Canada, but not here. Many suppose that this was the reasoning for hiring Bob Rock as their producer and putting out the album Gravity (which is why a crucial member of their line-up left, that was the creative difference). Most OLP fans hate the album, but I can't share that sentiment. Regardless of their subject matter, regardless of how unique they are or aren't playing, I hear the same things coming from that group. Whether it be the musical dissonance that we've come to expect, or an interesting, dark twist on an old favorite...OLP has never failed to deliver to me songs that hit me in just the right way.
However, when I first picked up Healthy in Paranoid Times...I was REALLY disappointed. Had they gone too far? Was it possible that this was, in fact, their worst album? I wasn't ready to believe it, and I did actually find a few songs that I really really enjoyed. But overall, I just couldn't connect, you know? I felt left out, a place I've never felt with them before.
And then I went to see them perform at the 9:30 club in DC. It was very exciting for me, because the last performance of theirs I attended was on the date that Happiness was released. So yeah, it had been a while. They didn't perform my old favorites the way I remembered, and to be honest, I forgot some of the lyrics. But that didn't stop me from tearing up. I was connecting, I was rediscovering something I truly loved, and I was finding new material to love. They did some rather unexpected pieces from the new album. I didn't expect to enjoy "Boy" as much as I did. Nor did I think "Wipe That Smile Off Your Face" would be such a crowd favorite, but it was. The songs from their new album got the crowd really going, and you could see just who was a hardcore OLP fans from the ones who "remembered their glory days". They were the ones singing passionately to old *and* new songs alike.
So I took another listen. Maybe, just maybe, this was better than I thought. And yeah, it was.
First of all, "Angels/Losing/Sleep" may be the dumbest way to give us a song title, but the song itself is stunning. From the bayou twang of the opening guitar to the heavy bass falling in afterwards, to Raine's voice belting out some very odd lyrics, this song had me hooked. I'm glad I took the time to really listen to it, because this is an instant classic in my book.
"Where Are You", the first single off this album, is amazing. The lyrics are actually quite clever. "Tonight, did Punk Rock get it right, is there no future in sight? Is it different, now, is it different?" It's energetic, something which isn't a real OLP staple, but it's definitely something I can happily stomach.
"Wipe That Smile Off Your Face" is one of the angriest songs I've heard from them, and watching Raine shake on stage as he uttered those words into the microphone was chilling. He looked mortifyingly angry. It's such a wonderful song, I love listening to it when I am angry, it lets me vent.
Now Im not up on Raine's personal life, although I know he is married to Chantal Kreviazuk. If they had a child, I'd understand what he said at the concert about "Boy" being about one of those amazing unexpected moments in your life. I can't really be sure. But the song itself is heartfelt, and a pleasant listen.
"The World on a String" is another departure from style for them, but again, it works. It's fun to listen to, not too difficult to learn the lyrics, and nice to sing to. Definitely a good track.
"Don't Stop" is dirty dirty dirty! I never expected lyrics like this from them, but I don't mind! Good job, guys!
Those are the standout tracks, but the nice thing about music is that you form your own bond with your own selection of tracks. What I say here is simply my own personal experience. I do, however, highly recommend this to anyone (yes, even you), if to do nothing else than form your own bonds with the songs of your choice.
7 of 8 found the following review helpful:
DRM = Dangerous Rootkit Malware Nov 13, 2005 Sony should be ashamed for infecting PCs in which this CD is played.
Amazon should stop selling this CD immediately given the known damage that is causes to computers.
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