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Octopus

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Download links and information about Octopus by The Bees. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 39:18 minutes.

Artist: The Bees
Release date: 2007
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic
Tracks: 10
Duration: 39:18
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $19.24
Buy on Amazon $9.49
Buy on Songswave €1.11

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Who Cares What the Question Is? 3:35
2. Love In the Harbour 4:02
3. Left Foot Stepdown 4:06
4. Got to Let Go 5:23
5. Listening Man 4:47
6. Stand 4:13
7. (This Is for the) Better Days 4:37
8. The Ocularist 3:56
9. Hot One! 2:45
10. End of the Street 1:54

Details

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The most intriguing collective of multi-instrumentalists since the Beta Band first began mixing an unholy array of accompaniment, the Bees (or A Band of Bees in America) channel some of the same '60s influences on Octopus as on their two previous records, and a few new ones as well. Fortunately, as usual, listeners who couldn't care less about playing a game of spot-the-influence are rewarded just as much as those who do; Octopus presents ten nuggets of effortless throwback pop, laid-back and breezy but tightly melodic. A trio of straightforward pop pleasers begins the album, all with the same jaunty, freewheeling character as a Beta Band jam (or a Kinks pastorale, for that matter). After a pair of marvelous detours — "Got to Let Go" is organ-combo rock with a Caribbean flair á la Georgie Fame, while "Listening Man" echoes the high points of blue-eyed soul in the Rascals — the Bees are back on track, although perhaps even more mellow than on the first half. Although not a concept album, Octopus does often return to the nautical theme (or more generally, travel away from home) that's de rigueur for indie rock during the 2000s, but here too, the Bees know that too much concept and not enough music is a bad trade-off. Without this set of brilliant songs or the masterful way they mix and match their instruments, the Bees wouldn't sound half as interesting as they do; they wouldn't be anything more than a retread of their '60s influences (or, perhaps, their retread of XTC's '60s influences).