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EVERYTHING NOW
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曲目リスト
1 | Track 1 |
2 | Track 2 |
3 | Track 3 |
4 | Track 4 |
5 | Track 5 |
6 | Track 6 |
7 | Track 7 |
8 | Track 8 |
9 | Track 9 |
10 | Track 10 |
11 | Track 11 |
12 | Track 12 |
13 | Track 13 |
商品の説明
Digipak. 2017 release, the fifth album from the Canadian alt-rock band. Everything Now was produced by Arcade Fire, Daft Punk's Thomas Bangalter, and Steve Mackey, with co-production by Markus Dravs. It was recorded at Boombox Studios in New Orleans, Sonovox Studios in Montreal, and Gang Recording Studio in Paris. Founded in 2001, the band came to prominence in 2004 with the release of their critically acclaimed debut album Funeral. Their second studio album, Neon Bible, won them the 2008 Meteor Music Award for Best International Album and the 2008 Juno Award for Alternative Album of the Year. Their third studio album, The Suburbs, was released in 2010 to critical acclaim and commercial success. It received many accolades, including the 2011 Grammy for Album of the Year, the 2011 Juno Award for Album of the Year, and the 2011 Brit Award for Best International Album. In 2013, Arcade Fire released their fourth album, Reflektor, and scored the feature film Her, for which band members William Butler and Owen Pallett were nominated in the Best Original Score category at the 86th Academy Awards.
登録情報
- メーカーにより製造中止になりました : いいえ
- 製品サイズ : 14.07 x 12.75 x 0.97 cm; 63.5 g
- メーカー : COLUM
- EAN : 0889854478520
- 商品モデル番号 : 88985447852
- オリジナル盤発売日 : 2017
- レーベル : COLUM
- ASIN : B071LJJYCR
- ディスク枚数 : 1
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 97,060位ミュージック (ミュージックの売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 17,409位ロック (ミュージック)
- - 21,829位輸入盤
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上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
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2024年2月20日にイタリアでレビュー済み


El mejor grupo de habla inglesa de este siglo, no te lo crees, vete a un concierto suyo.
Abrazos a todos los melomanos.


The title song works as a comment on the internet, twitter, blah blah blah, but taken more broadly it's what life has always been: too much, overwhelming, crushing. A person could have felt this way 200 years ago, or 2000. The suffering is as much about the inevitable weight of age and experience--"every inch of skin has a scar"--as overindulgence in songs, movies, whatever. It's about the corrosive effects of desire: for more possessions, for more experience, for more of everything. But what else is there to show we're alive? (Cf. the next song.) We can't escape desire, and therefore we can't escape suffering--and our lives can never really be "painless." (Cf. the song after that.)
The much reviled "Peter Pan" and "Chemistry" I see as persona songs. They represent a pair of obviously doomed attempts to escape from suffering and pain by, in the first case, retreat into a childish fantasy of escape from responsibility, and in the second case a possessive, aggressive lust. Both songs are full of ambiguity (all the talk about death, cancer in Peter Pan; the oddly reticent stuff about "you haven't met me yet" in Chemistry), and there's sadness under the surface--especially at the end of Peter Pan.
In the two halves of "Infinite Content," I see a comment on the duality of life: we can be miserable, yet happiness is only inches away; we can be frantic, yet calmness is always right there, always within reach, just on the opposite side of the same experience.
I see "Electric Blue" as a song about illusion. How can we think one person is special, one experience is meaningful, out of the thousands of other identical ones? A summer fling, it's over...what's the big deal? But we have to see it that way, through a kind of rose-colored glasses (electric blue-colored glasses?). The loved one has to seem special, if only in our own blinkered minds, as we obsess over them night after night. And this is the source of much suffering, but also beauty--and it's a beautiful song.
Finally, "Put Your Money on Me" and especially "We Don't Deserve Love" are kind of the bookends standing opposite the big 3 "statement" songs at the start of the album. Those first songs diagnosed the causes of our suffering and pain, while these last two sketch out possible ways of moving forward and finding a measure of peace in spite of all that we know. They're chastened love songs, ambiguous and shot through with sadness, the awareness of distance and loneliness and loss, how no relationship can last forever, and no other person can really solve all our problems. Desire for another person--and the sacrifices you make for that person, the compromises, the ups and downs--will inevitably lead to suffering. But there's also beauty and sweetness, if only fleetingly. And boy is "We Don't Deserve Love" beautiful in its final minutes.
Then we repeat the cycle and do it all over again, as one does.
What I've come to really value about Arcade Fire over time is the layered quality of their music. There are surface levels, there are obvious details, and then there are depths and subtleties and things you only notice in the arrangement on the 20th listen or the 50th. To be honest, The Suburbs kind of irked me at first (it seemed cheesy, over-earnest, stiff) and so did Reflektor (what's with all the dance beats, where are the guitars?). And yet, the albums have grown and deepened and taken on additional meanings as the years pass. I expect Everything Now will do the same.