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Japanandroids near to the wild heart of life japandroids near to the wild heart of life youtube
Japanandroids near to the wild heart of life japandroids near to the wild heart of life youtube





japanandroids near to the wild heart of life japandroids near to the wild heart of life youtube

Garage and noise rock have made it this far while continuing to sound interesting, and have frequently challenged the conventions of traditional rock. Sadly, Near To The Wild Heart Of Life doesn’t showcase new ideas, instead rehashes older ones that fans have already or are too familiar with. For starters, the opening title track sounds too similar to “The House That Heaven Built” with the same structure and chorus chants, and that style is repeated again in “North East South West.” But there are some highlights-for example, “I’m Sorry (For Not Finding You Sooner)” carries on the tradition that Japandroids are known for and hints at where this album could have gone. There isn’t much left to discover past what’s already been provided, and at times the record feels hollow. The problem with Near To The Wild Heart Of Life is its lack of depth. For a duo, Brian King and David Prowse manage to pump enough sweat through their songs to come across as raucous as a band with at least twice as many members.

japanandroids near to the wild heart of life japandroids near to the wild heart of life youtube

For what it’s worth, the band still retains the signature energy that made them great to begin with. Instead, this record seems to suggest that Japandroids have reached the end of their exploration. There is no longer the search for meaning in early adulthood. At this point in their careers, Japandroids have matured considerably. Even still, Celebration Rock remained interesting enough to keep the band’s momentum going.įive years have passed since then and now Japandroids have returned with Near To The Wild Heart Of Life, a record that at some points is exciting, but is essentially a delayed sequel to Celebration Rock. When they returned with Celebration Rock in 2012, the band still maintained the same likable characteristics but this time, the production was cleaner, more polished and merged different styles of rock that ranged in influence from Springsteen to Hüsker Dü. This was Japandroids at their peak, and their career was only starting. Post-Nothing is an example of what a great rock album really is: Sensitive, expressive and infused with boundless energy. When Japandroids debuted in 2009 with Post-Nothing, the Vancouver duo refreshed a garagey rock sound at a time when electronic, “chillwave” and anything guitar-free yielded greater novelty.







Japanandroids near to the wild heart of life japandroids near to the wild heart of life youtube