Review : Guster - Easy Wonderful
Sputnikmusic
Growing old kind of sucks. Although I’m only in my last year of college and thus fairly young in the scheme of things, everything’s already gone down hill – since my 21st birthday has passed me by, the only notable birthday event I have to look forward to is my 25th and a reduction in my car insurance rates, not to mention a decreased metabolism, more bills, and (hopefully but not really) a Monday-Friday job. Talk about an exciting landmark! My warped sense of my own rapidly accelerating age is already cropping up in my music tastes: I want everything to sound like my favorite albums and bands of all time, which I inevitably listened to in my latter high school years and whose follow-ups inevitably disappoint because nothing stacks up to that wide-eyed wonder of hearing something that changes everything. Take Guster, for instance, calmly making what amounts to the same pop-rock-with-an-unfair-ear-for-hooks since 1999’s classic Lost and Gone Forever, with varying degrees of success. I’ve gotten older, and Guster’s fans have definitely gotten older – I recently attended a show where the majority of the audience was way past college and hovering around the black hole of their 30s – but Guster have pretty much stayed exactly the same, and it doesn’t seem to mean a damn thing. Maybe that’s why they’re one of the few bands from my high school days that have yet to truly disappoint me. Now the critical part of me finds plenty to dislike with this, their sixth album. It’s absolutely nonthreatening – if I had to compare Easy Wonderful to a living thing, it’d be a koala bear, cuddly and furry with a strict vegetarian diet. Drummer Brian Rosenworcel’s brilliant hand drumming, which defined the band’s early sound and still makes their live shows one of my favorites, has been, by and large, neutered to a standard sticks-and-pedals kit. Adam Gardner’s lovely baritone is now reserved strictly for backing vocals, and singer Ryan Miller shows an increasing love for saccharine lyrics and chintzy sentiments that would best be left in a Hallmark card. In other words, it’s the same gradual progression towards “dad-rock” that Ganging Up On The Sun hinted at, but with one slight addendum: Guster is still churning out some of the best melodies of their career.
It’s why I know that Guster will always be the security blanket of my musical existence when they keep tossing out effortless gems like unreasonably catchy first single “Do You Love Me.” Hell, any band that can use song titles like that or “Bad Bad World” or (God help us) “This Is How It Feels To Have A Broken Heart” and make me immediately forgive them when that melody hits has my respect. Guster have been doing this a long time, and occasionally it shows, but I can’t think of another band who, song-for-song, keep coming up with choruses and hooks that stay in my head when other, more “challenging” albums gather dust until I have to write my end-of-year lists. There’s been better songs this year, but few more likely to have me singing along in my highest pitch than “That’s No Way To Heaven” and fewer still with the potential to kick around my skull for weeks like “Do You Want,” or “Architects and Engineers,” or virtually everything else here. There’s nothing more groundbreaking here than some well-placed banjo twang, and Easy Wonderful hasn’t made me think or made me call up a friend late at night caught in some ten-minute-plus audio brilliance. This is just guitars, bass, drums, and harmonies, and it’s absolutely, relentlessly gorgeous. If Guster can grow old and still sound so damn cheerful, maybe everything won’t be so drab after all....full text
Blogcritics
Guster has announced the title, tracklisting, and first batch of tour dates in support of their new album Easy Wonderful which will be released October 5, 2010. They're also allowing fans to download a track "Bad Bad World" from the upcoming record free through their web site.Easy Wonderful is the follow up to their acclaimed 2006 release Ganging Up On The Sun. The band didn't intend on taking four years between records but after touring behind Sun, three of the four members became first-time fathers. They also changed labels and spent time writing, recording, and touring intermittently, including a 10th Anniversary Tour for Lost & Gone Forever, and Adam Gardner continued his steady involvement in environmental activism.
Writing and recording had its share of ups and downs. They began working with a producer and those sessions were productive but the results weren't leading the band where they wanted to go. They took time away and started fresh. New songs were written and songs from the earlier sessions were reconsidered and tweaked.
What was left at the end of the recording sessions? Multi-instrumentalist Joe Pisapia says Easy Wonderful is "the classic Guster pop record." Drummer Brian Rosenworcel said, "When I try to describe our album to people I’ve been saying, we really just honed in on trying to write 12 great pop songs. I think Easy Wonderful is more consistent than anything we’ve done.”...full text
Klap4music
Growing old kind of sucks. Although I’m only in my last year of college and thus fairly young in the scheme of things, everything’s already gone down hill – since my 21st birthday has passed me by, the only notable birthday event I have to look forward to is my 25th and a reduction in my car insurance rates, not to mention a decreased metabolism, more bills, and (hopefully but not really) a Monday-Friday job. Talk about an exciting landmark! My warped sense of my own rapidly accelerating age is already cropping up in my music tastes: I want everything to sound like my favorite albums and bands of all time, which I inevitably listened to in my latter high school years and whose follow-ups inevitably disappoint because nothing stacks up to that wide-eyed wonder of hearing something that changes everything. Take Guster, for instance, calmly making what amounts to the same pop-rock-with-an-unfair-ear-for-hooks since 1999’s classic Lost and Gone Forever, with varying degrees of success. I’ve gotten older, and Guster’s fans have definitely gotten older – I recently attended a show where the majority of the audience was way past college and hovering around the black hole of their 30s – but Guster have pretty much stayed exactly the same, and it doesn’t seem to mean a damn thing. Maybe that’s why they’re one of the few bands from my high school days that have yet to truly disappoint me.Now the critical part of me finds plenty to dislike with this, their sixth album. It’s absolutely nonthreatening – if I had to compare Easy Wonderful to a living thing, it’d be a koala bear, cuddly and furry with a strict vegetarian diet. Drummer Brian Rosenworcel’s brilliant hand drumming, which defined the band’s early sound and still makes their live shows one of my favorites, has been, by and large, neutered to a standard sticks-and-pedals kit. Adam Gardner’s lovely baritone is now reserved strictly for backing vocals, and singer Ryan Miller shows an increasing love for saccharine lyrics and chintzy sentiments that would best be left in a Hallmark card. In other words, it’s the same gradual progression towards “dad-rock” that Ganging Up On The Sun hinted at, but with one slight addendum: Guster is still churning out some of the best melodies of their career.
It’s why I know that Guster will always be the security blanket of my musical existence when they keep tossing out effortless gems like unreasonably catchy first single “Do You Love Me.” Hell, any band that can use song titles like that or “Bad Bad World” or (God help us) “This Is How It Feels To Have A Broken Heart” and make me immediately forgive them when that melody hits has my respect. Guster have been doing this a long time, and occasionally it shows, but I can’t think of another band who, song-for-song, keep coming up with choruses and hooks that stay in my head when other, more “challenging” albums gather dust until I have to write my end-of-year lists. There’s been better songs this year, but few more likely to have me singing along in my highest pitch than “That’s No Way To Heaven” and fewer still with the potential to kick around my skull for weeks like “Do You Want,” or “Architects and Engineers,” or virtually everything else here. There’s nothing more groundbreaking here than some well-placed banjo twang, and Easy Wonderful hasn’t made me think or made me call up a friend late at night caught in some ten-minute-plus audio brilliance. This is just guitars, bass, drums, and harmonies, and it’s absolutely, relentlessly gorgeous. If Guster can grow old and still sound so damn cheerful, maybe everything won’t be so drab after all....full text
Guster Album Reviews
Sweetslyrics Charts
Sweetslyrics Top 20 Artists
Most Searched
Guster Lyrics
- 1. Demons
- 2. Satellite
- 3. Manifest Destiny
- 4. Ruby Falls
- 5. Perfect
- 6. Happier
- 7. Grin
- 8. Happy Frappy
- 9. Dear Valentine
- 10. C'Mon
Sweetslyrics Poll
ice-cream or chocolate?
