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The Boy Who Knew Too Much
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The Boy Who Knew Too Much  (Audio CD) 
by Mika

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Description:

2009 sophomore album, the follow-up to his multi-million selling debut, produced by Mika and Greg Wells (Katy Perry, P!nk). The Boy Who Knew Too Much features guest contributions by Imogen Heap and Final Fantasy's Owen Pallett, and contains the brilliant first single 'We Are Golden'. The album straddles a line between childish na‹vet‚ and world-worn sophistication; Mika likens this transformation as the shift from childhood and his debut's innocence to something more akin to adolescence. The arrangements are bigger and more beautiful than ever before, and the album is underpinned by an open-hearted and accepting idea of what living in the 21st century means in all its contradictory, complicated glory.

Product Details:
Audio CD Release Date: September 22, 2009
Studio: Casablanca
Number Of Discs: 1
Average Customer Rating: based on 7 reviews
Track Listing:
1. We Are Golden
2. Blame It on the Girls
3. Rain
4. Dr. John
5. I See You
6. Blue Eyes
7. Good Gone Girl
8. Touches You
9. By The Time
10. One Foot Boy
11. Toy Boy
12. Pick Up Off The Floor
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.0
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3ok but just not like the debut  Nov 02, 2009
The debut was so fun and creative that I rushed to buy this followup. As is often the problem with promising new artists, I guess he lost it after the debut. Some of these songs are "ok" but Im not hooked on any like I was with the first one.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Just Plain Good Music  Oct 11, 2009
I discovered (and fell in love with) the first album (Life in Cartoon Motion) earlier this summer, so I was very excited when I found out there was going to be another one.

Mika is a unique and extremely energetic individual, and his songs are awe-inspiring. In my collection of music, I give most songs 2 or 3 stars; my tastes are widely varied, and there's little I actually dislike. Most artists, however, only have one or two songs that receives a full five-star rating in my mental rating system. Mika is one of the only artists that produces nearly all fours and fives. Nearly any song by Mika I will listen to repeatedly, though some more than others. I have yet to find any other musician (in modern or previous times) which compares - though I love Queen, and some of the other 70s and 80s pop/rock (I find very little of interest in the 90s or 00s), even Queen (which has some truly great songs) does not have the same density for me, in which a single album will contain five or six perfect five-star songs.

A lot of people dislike Mika, but don't form any opinions until you've actually heard it. If you're like me, you'll love some solid, good music. In spite of all the references people make to earlier musicians, Mika stands alone.

If you liked LICM, you will like this album. There is no analogue to Grace Kelly; nothing quite as wildly fantastic as that, I must admit. But there are multiple songs that are at least equal to Relax, Take It Easy (which in my opinion is the second strongest song in the album)- so if you loved LICM, you should love this one as well.

Good songs from LICM: Grace Kelly; Relax, Take It Easy; Love Today; Lollipop; Stuck In The Middle; Ring Ring (they're all good, but those are the best ones)
Good songs from TBWKTM: Blame It On The Girls; Rain; Dr. John; Good Gone Girl; Lover Boy; and of course We Are Golden (once again, they're all good - those are my favorites)

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4It's hard not to like Mika.  Sep 28, 2009
Funky, Brit-pop is back!

Mika returns with his new CD, "The Boy Who Knew Too Much", the much-anticipated follow-up to his successful "Life in Cartoon Motion" of 2007. Produced by Mika and Greg Wells, who has worked with Katy Perry and P!nk, this new collection is just as fun, candy-coated and laced with childlike innocence as its predecessor. However, moreso on this album than on the last, it is easy to discern Mika's sexuality, which he has spoken about with discretion in the past.

Below is a brief description and numerical rating of the tracks on this CD. You can also get the Special Edition for an additional $2.00, ($11.99), which includes some extra video footage.

Track 1: We Are Golden--(8)--a lively song to start off with--"we are not who you think we are, we are golden!" Mika's accent shines through on the chorus to this teenage rebellion song. Don't go by our famiies, don't go by the tragedies we've been through, we're young and we're alive!

Track 2: Blame it On the Girls--(6)--a song about someone who's down on life and has a generally crappy attitude but really has no reason to, since he has great looks and everything everyone else envies. He'll blame his misery on everyone else, so long as he doesn't have to take the blame himself.

Track 3: Rain--(8)--never has singing about being miserable been so catchy and sing-along encouraging. You'll be happy to sing about how much you hate when it rains.

Track 4: Dr. John--(7)--Beatles-esque rocker about trying to live life but feeling like you've failed your parents in the long run, so now you're enlisting the help of Dr. John to help you make sense of it all.

Track 5: I See You--(8)--a powerful piano ballad about being in love with someone but it being complicated in the sense that you can't let them know. If they fell for you too, though, how would you know? Neither of you can express it. So he'll just adore them from afar, no matter how painful that is. It is easy to imagine this song as a Broadway number.

Track 6: Blue Eyes--(9)--this fetching number has an almost reggae edge to it. Here, he is trying to cheer up a poor girl whose heart got broken so she's taking pills and wondering why she's not feeling any better. "What's the matter, matter, blue eyes, blue eyes?" You can almost imagine the girl sitting on the beach with Mika, smiling through her tears and giggling at him.

Track 7: Good Gone Girl--(9)--this is one fun song about a girl who used to be a good girl but has abandoned her dreams and now steps on and uses men before they can step on and use her.

Track 8: Touches You--(7)--jingly piano rock reminiscent of George Michael's style about wanting to be close to someone in any form that allows you to touch them.

Track 9: By the Time--(8)--Mika usually weaves miserable things into poppy and catchy songs to help you forget your worries. Here, he makes a beautiful ballad about missing a lost loved one. By the time he fell asleep, they were gone.

Track 10: One Foot Boy--(7)--catchy, foot-tapping tune about being done once and for all with a relationship. He won't stand being asked to change anymore--you love him for who he is or he's done! And he's done.

Track 11: Toy Boy--(10)--a touching, tender song that sounds like it was lifted from a puppet show but contains much deeper content. The young boy sleeps with his boy doll until his mom has a problem with it and supplements a Barbie doll. The boy doll though is left hurt by the event and hopes the boy will remember him and his love for him when he is older.

Track 12: Pick Up Off the Floor--(8)--a cute song to end the CD with, those boys are going to do what they're going to do so don't let it get you down. If he doesn't love you anymore, pick your heart up off the floor and move on.

Overall album rating: 8


3Mika - The Boy Who Knew Too Much 6/10  Sep 28, 2009
Chances are if you liked Mika before, you'll love The Boy Who Knew Too Much. The necessary corollary to that, of course, is if you hated Life in Cartoon Motion, well... let's say there probably won't be too much to like here. Unfortunately, it is this split in opinion that makes The Boy Who Knew Too Much only a middling success as an album. While Mika should be commended for creating yet another record of supercharged, operatic pop music, one practically overflowing with bells, whistles, and that flawless falsetto, it's essentially a more polished version of his debut, resplendent in multi-part Queen-esque harmonies and Scissor Sisters gender-swapping lyrics. From the children's choir backing of outsized opener "We Are Golden," to the Elton John piano and tribal drums on "Blue Eyes," to the bombastic, overly cheesy production on syrupy ballad "I See You," it's the best and worst of everything we've come to expect from Mika over the course of twelve songs.

But put aside Mika's utter lack of creative restraint and habit of whamming one in the skull with his lyrically unvarnished messages, and The Boy Who Knew Too Much reveals, from track to track, the heart and soul of a natural-born songsmith. While there's nothing here as immediately grabbing as "Grace Kelly," plenty come close. The best of them come in twos: the double punch of "Blame It On The Girls" and "Rain" comes first, the former dashing into a syncopated piano/handclap stomp and the kind of memorable chorus that even haters will find impossible to ignore, while the latter alternates between trippy verses and a synthtastic chorus that highlights Mika's spiraling falsetto. "Good Gone Girl" and "Touches You," meanwhile, are two of the most straightforward pop tunes on the record, featuring the requisite amount of piano, glam-rock choruses, and massive hooks that just won't quit. Best of all, they keep the grandiosity to a minimum, instead relying on their effortless melodies and coming out the better for it.

It's a shame that Mika still wastes his time on frivolous exercises like the vapid metaphor of "Toy Boy" and continues to inflate so many good ideas with unnecessary production and hammy performances like "We Are Golden," but The Boy Who Knew Too Much is nothing if not a pop album that harbors no illusions about itself. Mika will never be the kind of artist to change his style as tastes evolve, and so it's heartening to hear songs like the haunting electro of "By The Time" and the lounge-y closer "Pick Up Off The Floor," where Mika teases with hints of what he might be capable of. But then the full orchestra comes in on "Pick Up Off The Floor," the army of cloned harmonies build up, that falsetto goes where it wants to, and we're left, for better or worse, with the Mika of today.

*Originally published in the Daily Trojan newspaper.

8 of 9 found the following review helpful:

4A Review of 'The Boy Who Knew Too Much'  Sep 23, 2009
'The Boy Who Knew Too Much' is Mika's second studio album. If you are wondering how this compares to his first release, this collection of songs is still very pop orientated with Mika's signature use of piano and drums and organic, free-style singing approaching. 'The Boy Who Knew Too Much' is very light; somehow Mika manages to make most of the songs very upbeat and optimistic with the exception of one or two. The production and writing quality of the lyrics are slightly improved over his debut album and on some songs, the instrumentals are remarkably well (at times more so than the lyrics).

The Good: Mika has improved as a song writer and producer. I was impressed more so with some of the musical instrument production more so than the lyrics simply because some of the songs are very complex and moving musically while the lyrics were a bit lacking and not as strong. Also, Mika did not stray too far from the style of his first release. In many ways this feels like a natural progression from the first album rather than something completely new and different. More tracks featured on this release came together better for me and felt more cohesive than in the previous release. Only up until the last two or three tracks did I feel he was going too far out into weird musical territory.

The Bad: None of the tracks are bad, but some felt weak. Mika shines on the upbeat, pure celebratory 'pop' tracks like "We Are Golden", "Blame It On the Girls" and "Good Gone Girl", while the slower tracks felt somewhat out of place with the rest of the album's vibe. While "Toy Boy" is quirky and tells a (somewhat) amusing story lyrically, it simply brings the album down because it feels very left field and distracting, taking away from the smooth flow of the album. "Dr. John" sounded like a cut from his first album, and that was okay but to me as a listener, it felt out of place among the other tracks.

In all, if you liked Mika's first release, you'll enjoy this one. It's pop, fun, dance-inducing with interesting lyrics and musical backing that really pulls you into the experience. There is a very old, Beatles/Queen vibe on a lot of tracks while some felt like they were re-imaginings of older songs ("Touches You" reminds me a lot of a pop-remaking of George Michael's "Father Figure"; "Good Girl Gone" features some harmonies similar to Frankie Valli's "Walk Like a Man"). Mika flirts with different past genres of music; a little hint of disco with a lot of 1980s woven through many tracks. It's fun, carefree, quality music. Only a few tracks are skip-worthy but otherwise it's a solid effort. Worth a listen.

Listen to These: "Blame It On the Girls", "Touches You", "One Foot Boy", "Rain"

 
 
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