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VietNam - VietNam (2007)

VietNam - VietNam (2007)

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XLD Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) - 346 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 137 Mb | 00:59:36
Indie Rock, Psychedelic Rock | Label: Kemado Records

VietNam is the full-length debut of VietNam, released in January 2007. Mickey Madden and Jesse Carmichael of Maroon 5 helped record this album, with Madden serving as one of the executive producers. Jenny Lewis from Rilo Kiley also makes an appearance on the album.

AllMusic Review by Heather Phares
Switching to Kemado after a brief stay at Vice Records, where they released their impressive debut EP, The Concrete's Always Grayer on the Other Side of the Street, Vietnam returned with their self-titled full-length. While they're still playing the same kind of hazy, narcotic poet-rock they introduced on the EP, this time around the results are hit-and-miss. One of the biggest problems with the album is its sound. While The Concrete's Always Grayer on the Other Side of the Street wasn't lo-fi, its sweaty, gritty production gave Vietnam's songs warmth and conviction. Vietnam was recorded in Los Angeles' famed Sound City studio, and unfortunately this more polished approach diminishes the band, making their sound thinner and more shrill than it was before. This doesn't do the ambitious sprawl of their music any favors. Though "Step on Inside" makes good use of the album's wall-of-sound production, more often it tends to show how big the gap between the band and the sound they're reaching for is. Tracks like the anti-materialism lament "Mr. Goldfinger" and lengthy junkie requiem "Toby" (one of many references on the album to near-fatal overdoses) come off as heavy-handed. Not all of Vietnam feels this strained, though. "Too Tired" and "Apocalypse" originally appeared on The Concrete's Always Grayer on the Other Side of the Street, and sound nearly as good here as they did on the EP, and the band sounds much more genuine when they're having fun instead of trying for a grand gesture. "Welcome to My Room" chugs along on a heavy, Velvet Underground-inspired groove, then pauses for breath only to rev up again, while "Gabe" revels in the possibilities of a Spanish vacation. "The Priest, the Poet and the Pig" is a rousing highlight with some inspired guitar solos – in fact, the consistently great guitar work is probably the best thing about the album. Vietnam is uneven and more than a little disappointing compared to the band's previous work, but despite its frustrating moments, it still shows that they have potential.

Tracklist
01 Step On Inside
02 Priest, Poet, & The Pig
03 Apocalypse
04 Mr. Goldfinger
05 Toby
06 Gabe
07 Welcome To My Room
08 Hotel Riverview
09 Summer In The City
10 Too Tired
11 Untitled

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