171,024 plays
143 SHARES
155 FAVS
album
26,199
plays
8
favs
17
shares
track
duration
plays
01
In The Beginning
5:44
5,622
plays
02
The Mountain
3:56
1,858
plays
03
She's Walking Out
3:10
1,955
plays
04
Helicopters
4:23
2,625
plays
05
In The End
3:46
1,634
plays
06
Oh Shoplifter
3:22
1,870
plays
07
Outro
1:10
1,169
plays
08
Halo The Harpoons
3:42
1,920
plays
09
It Takes Time
4:10
1,587
plays
10
Destroyer
3:11
1,853
plays
11
Baby Blues
3:33
1,507
plays
12
The House We Live In
3:27
1,890
plays
13
Save Blood (4-Track Demo)
3:22
709
plays
album review
Logic Will Break Your Heart, with its brooding post-punk soundscapes and art rock swagger, topped many a best-of list in 2003, branding the Stills as the next Interpol, British Sea Power, etc. For their long-awaited follow-up, the Stills ditched their Joy Division and Echo & the Bunnymen records for Ziggy Stardust, early Elton John, and Muswell Hillbillies-era Kinks, resulting in a record that is the physical embodiment of polarity. Without Feathers isn't so much a departure as it is a complete reinvention for the Montreal quartet. Only the "Killing Moon"-esque "Helicopters" and the Spoon-worthy "Halo the Harpoons" hint at the band's eyeliner past. The earthy arrangements of Hammond organ, piano, guitar, bass, and drums that populate the rest of the album recall the group's Canadian forefather, Neil Young. The two-punch opening onslaught of "In the Beginning" and "The Mountain" sets the tone, relying on the kind of gritty, melodic, and distinctly blue-collar aesthetic that drove the Doves' "Some Cities" in 2005. The barrage of midtempo filler/killer that follows almost brings the album to a complete halt, but the Stills redeem themselves on the rowdy, horn-led "It Takes Time," "Destroyer," and "Baby Blues," the latter a winsome duet with Metric/Broken Social Scene's Emily Haines that shows they can balance the two styles with grace and dignity. Without Feathers may lack its predecessor's apocalyptic vision, but it's a new direction for a group that was heading down an awfully familiar -- and extremely congested -- road. ~ James Christopher Monger, All Music Guide
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