Top Solutions for Common Dog Problems - Training, Behavior & Health Tips for Pet Owners | Perfect for Home, Park & Travel Use
Top Solutions for Common Dog Problems - Training, Behavior & Health Tips for Pet Owners | Perfect for Home, Park & Travel Use
Top Solutions for Common Dog Problems - Training, Behavior & Health Tips for Pet Owners | Perfect for Home, Park & Travel Use

Top Solutions for Common Dog Problems - Training, Behavior & Health Tips for Pet Owners | Perfect for Home, Park & Travel Use

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Description

Product Description When sold by Amazon.com, this product will be manufactured on demand using CD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply. Amazon.com Every great power pop band is all about two things: meaty melodies and oo-la-la choruses, and there's no disbelieving that this Phoenix band have the formula nailed on their sophomore album. Produced by a master of the genre (Steve McDonald, founding member of Redd Kross), the 12-tracker advances the Format's debut album by sandblasting pocketfuls of hooks and poetic prose into the consciousness. Band leaders Nate Ruess and Sam Means progress like a modern day Colin Blunstone/Rod Argent, zigzagging Zombies-like through a piano-led, choral-like pool of tuneful experimentation and falsetto intonation. The band make it almost too easy to pick out potential radio gems, which include up-tempo numbers like "Time Bomb" and "She Doesn't Get It," and especially "Oceans," with its glee club chorus that's downright impossible to shake. But Dog Problems must be heard as a whole to appreciate the dexterous brilliance of Means and Ruess, who apply a '20s dancehall vibe to the title track, turn the narcissistic "I'm Actual" into an Abbey Road waltz, and even flirt with country music in the discreet "Snails." Like the Zombies, the Raspberries, Dwight Twilley, or the Shins? This record may be for you. --Scott Holter

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
This is absolutely one of the best albums I've heard in years. Excellent vocals, instrumentation, production along intelligently written and very personal lyrics all come together beautifully here to form an excellent blend of smart pop music along with some very different yet still very good tracks (see the title track "Dog Problems" and "Inches and Falling"). You can really connect with singer Nate Ruess, as his lyrics make you (almost painfully if you listen closely) aware that some girl of his really crushed his soul prior to writing these songs. Anyone who's been through a bad ending to a relationship or suffered some other form of heartbreak will know exactly what he is singing about.It's a shame hardly anyone has heard of this album, it deserves more recognition for the indie pop masterpiece that it is. Fans of their first album may be put off by its more mature, less radio-friendly sound, but if you actually appreciate music this is by far The Format's superior work.