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 Location:  Home » Music » General » Astronomy for DogsJuly 5, 2009  
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Astronomy for Dogs
Astronomy for Dogs
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List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $1.65
You Save: $13.33 (89%)
Buy New/Used from $0.76

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars(based on 3 reviews)
Sales Rank: 59821
Category: Music

Artist: The Aliens
Publisher: Astralwerks
Studio: Astralwerks
Manufacturer: Astralwerks
Label: Astralwerks
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 90523
UPC: 094639052325
EAN: 0094639052325
ASIN: B000NJWSCG

Release Date: June 19, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Setting Sun
  • Robot Man
  • I Am the Unknown
  • Tomorrow
  • Rox
  • Only Waiting
  • She Don't Love Me No More
  • Glover
  • Honest Again
  • Happy Song
  • Caravan

Similar Items:

  • Octopus
  • Luna
  • Alienoid Starmonica
  • Fleet Foxes
  • Oracular Spectacular

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
The Aliens have landed! Astronomy For Dogs sees former Beta Band members Gordon Anderson (aka Lone Pigeon), John Maclean and Robin Jones reunite for a fantastically eclectic debut album. It's epic, it's Psychedelic, it's Pop. It's gloriously over-the-top but also sharply on-the-money. This cosmically ambitious record begins with the organ-led Pop swagger of 'Setting Sun' and motors straight into 'Robot Man' (sounds like the superfunk jazzerama sound of Sly Stone meeting Steely Dan), and Astronomy For Dogs doesn't let up. Thrill to the Garage Rock shimmy and shake - imagine The Velvet Underground gone Funk - of 'Only Waiting'. Jump around to the Merseybeat charm of 'Glover'. And on it goes, this album that's set its controls for the heart of the sun, and for the sunny side of your heart (and sometimes the rainy side, too). 'The Happy Song' is, irrepressibly, irresistibly, just that. EMI. 2007.

Amazon.com
It takes less than thirty seconds to size up the Aliens and their peripatetic ways: "Setting Sun" nods shamelessly to both XTC and "All Along the Watchtower," using the mathematics of influence to make something instantly memorable--but still super-referential. Therein lies a slight problem for these once-Beta Band mainstays. Yes, this might well be considered a remnant project from the Beta Band, defunct since 2005. They reprise straight-up disco beats, make numerous declarative exclamations ("I am the robot man" and "I am the unknown" and, twice, "We are the aliens"), blow plaintive harmonica, and sing forlornly about love and the wide, wide world. This is a psychedelic manifesto of sorts, extending the Beta's languidly trippy sphere of influence and then adding to it without seeking acclaim for having done so. Chanted vocals, polyrhythmic backdrops, and angle-bending keyboards make the Aliens otherworldly, smudging the spot where you'd place them in the post-punk's history. --Andrew Bartlett


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Get over it!   April 28, 2009
I am a big fan of The Beta Band, so when I found out about this album I was very excited. To be honest, it is a pretty good album, but the lyrics become a bit tiresome. Gordon Anderson needs to get over whatever woman broke his heart or at least not sing about it CONSTANTLY!

Overall, though, a good album.



2 out of 5 stars Uneven Effort   April 10, 2009
The Aliens show promise but lack what great bands have;focus. This album is all over the place in all the wrong ways. Robot Man is classic but much of the rest of the album falls flat. This album has a couple of songs that are mix Cd worthy and that's about it


4 out of 5 stars Out of This World.   April 30, 2007
  5 out of 5 found this review helpful

The Beta Band. You've either heard of them or you haven't. One of the most talented bands of the last decade, The Beta Band got tons of critical acclaim but never received the kind of success that they truly deserved. The Aliens, a band made up of three former Beta Banders, continue that tradition of releasing great records. "Astronomy for Dogs" may not be The Beta Band, but it is a fantastic album from this new group.

The album begins with what is also probably the strongest song on the album, "Setting Sun." The song describes a failed relationship and the desire to just get away from it all "just like the setting sun." The song utilizes a really cool guitar progression and layer upon layer of vocals to form a really lush 60s-style pop/rock song. In fact, many, if not all of the songs on "Astronomy for Dogs" feels like it was ripped right out of the 60s or 70s.

Take, for example, the awesome "Robot Man," with it's slurring synths, funky bass line, and steady groove. It feels like it's straight out of the disco era, right down to the ridiculous lyrics "I am the robot man!" Eventually, it collapses into a more traditional, radio-friendly song that sounds more like Ted Leo and the Pharmacists than anything else. "I Am the Unknown" is another fantastic song that features some fantastic harmonizing and really deep production. It too feels like a song that could've been from the 60s.

"Rox" is a great song. It sounds like a straight up tribute to the Bee Gee's classic "Staying Alive" before breaking down into a more modern techno song. "She Don't Love Me" is your token ballad complete with a string reprise, because, let's face it, you can't very well have a 60s tribute album without a ballad. At over seven minutes long, it feels like they're milking it a little too hard, but it's never as distracting as it could be.

The album's major flaw is the lyrics. There's nothing truly memorable about any of these lyrics, and more often than not they just feel like shallow sing-alongs than anything else. "The Happy Song," for example, is downright childish. However, what The Aliens lack in substance, they more than make up for with style. "Astronomy for Dogs" is a fantastic album, and The Aliens do a great job of playing this style of music. Though I would've preferred a deeper album, lyrically, I'll gladly take this one for the time being.

Recommended for fans of The Beta Band and anyone who really liked the 60s.

Key Tracks:
1. "Setting Sun"
2. "Robot Man"
3. "I am the Unknown"
4. "Rox"
5. "Honest Again"

7 out of 10 Stars


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