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Birds At Home

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Download links and information about Birds At Home by Alamo Race. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Rock genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 44:17 minutes.

Artist: Alamo Race
Release date: 2003
Genre: Rock
Tracks: 14
Duration: 44:17
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Buy on iTunes $5.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Don't Frighten Them 2:19
2. Happy Accidents 3:42
3. We Like to Go On 3:29
4. Trunk 2:59
5. Summer Holiday 3:13
6. Short Leave 4:00
7. Life Is Great 4:46
8. Speed Up 3:16
9. Flame It Up 2:25
10. I Have Seen the Light 1:10
11. The Low End 3:22
12. Wild Bees 2:56
13. Birds At Home 3:18
14. Life Like Fire 3:22

Details

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Originally released in 2003 but reissued in a different sleeve in 2005, Birds at Home is the debut album by Dutch pop quartet Alamo Race Track. "Don't Frighten Them" starts the album with a brief bit of echoey downtempo electronica, but after that somewhat misleading opening, the group settles down to a crisp brand of guitar-based indie rock oddly reminiscent of the early days of Brit-pop. Pre-OK Computer Radiohead and mid-period Blur are the specific touchstones, with the former most obvious on quietly tense ballads like "Short Leave" and "Life Is Great" (which also includes a bizarre banjo-led country-blues coda) and the latter on jaunty pop tunes like "Summer Holiday" and "Happy Accidents." More of the latter may have been useful, because Birds at Home enters into a rather deadening stretch about halfway through with one slow, atmospheric number after another. Things only pick up about three-quarters of the way through with the album high point "The Low End," a slinky bass-driven groove with falsetto harmonies, and the quirky "Wild Bees," a showcase for bizarre rhythmic shifts, mumbled vocals, and acoustic slide guitars which would have fit brilliantly on any Beta Band album. Unfortunately, the somnolent title track and a belated return to the semi-electronic feel of the opener in the inconclusive closer "Life Like Fire" bring the energy level right back down. A better sense of pacing and dynamics would help Birds at Home considerably, but taken on an individual basis, these well-arranged if slightly familiar-sounding tunes are encouraging enough to bode well for the band's future.