Get Money Off at over 1000 stores with discount vouchers promotion codes
Home
Top 40
Best Sellers
New Releases
About Us


Artist:
   Title:
 
Lowest Price CDs Best Sellers 
Lowest Price CDs Blues 
Lowest Price CDs Childrens 
Lowest Price CDs Classical 
Lowest Price CDs Compilations 
Lowest Price CDs Country 
Lowest Price CDs Easy Listening 
Lowest Price CDs Electronic & Dance 
Lowest Price CDs Indie 
Lowest Price CDs Jazz 
Lowest Price CDs Metal 
Lowest Price CDs Pop 
Lowest Price CDs R&B and Soul 
Lowest Price CDs Rap & Hip-Hop 
Lowest Price CDs Reggae 
Lowest Price CDs Rock 
Lowest Price CDs Soundtracks 
Lowest Price CDs World 
 




Mgmt
Oracular Spectacular Cheapest price cds


Why spend hours searching the internet looking for the lowest price
Mgmt CDs when we can do a price comparison for you in seconds?


Grab a Free CD with Europe's No.1 Swapping Site

 
Oracular Spectacular - MGMT
Lowest price comparison results for Oracular Spectacular - MGMT

iTunes (digital download)  

£3.95

  Buy from iTunes (digital download)



The term Oracular Spectacular might not mean much, if anything, at all--it's essentially nonsensical--but that doesn't stop it feeling exactly right. Here is a band that treats dizzy cross-eyed awe and a vast bounding sense of sonic weightlessness as their yardstick, jostling to surpass themselves on a track-by-track basis and aiming for the musical equivalent of performing somersaults in tye-dye t-shirts off the rings of Jupiter. MGMT seemingly submit this debut album as an application to acquire and even supersede The Flaming Lips' previously uncontested mantle as spiritual leaders of over-sized Technicolor psychedelic-indie with a soul, weird but not so weird that swelling crowds and even flirtations with the charts aren't a foregone conclusion. "Time to Pretend" opens and sets a tone for the record, producer David Fridmann (Flaming Lips, Mercury Rev) providing a familiar expanse for them to riff across with bull's-eye synths, massive drums and their twist on the template--retro 80s electro and abstract shapes, see Suicide and the Talking Heads for reference. "The Youth" is centred around a hypnotically looping refrain that recalls Pink Floyd and David Bowie, as interpreted by a mellow Secret Machines and the brilliant "Pieces of What" is Ryan Adams spinning through cosmos with classic Neil Young on his headphones. "Future Reflections" meanwhile stand on its hands on a line somewhere in-between XTC and Ween. Thrillingly eclectic, endlessly colourful and never predictable. It's all a bit ridiculous, but indeed spectacularly so. --James Berry

Track Listing
Time to Pretend
Weekend Wars
Youth
Electric Feel
Kids
4th Dimensional Transition
Pieces of What
Of Moons, Birds & Monsters
Handshake
Future Reflections