Create account Log in

Way to Normal (Deluxe Version)

[Edit]

Download links and information about Way to Normal (Deluxe Version) by Ben Folds. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:07:43 minutes.

Artist: Ben Folds
Release date: 2008
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:07:43
Buy on iTunes $12.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Hiroshima (B B B Benny Hit His Head) 3:37
2. Dr. Yang 2:30
3. The Frown Song 3:37
4. You Don't Know Me (feat. Regina Spektor) 3:09
5. Before Cologne 0:53
6. Cologne 5:02
7. Errant Dog 2:24
8. Free Coffee 3:08
9. Bitch Went Nuts 3:06
10. Brainwascht 3:46
11. Effington 3:27
12. Kylie from Connecticut 4:43
13. Cologne (Piano Orchestra Version) 6:10
14. Cologne (Piano Orchestra Version) 7:01
15. Effington 3:37
16. Errant Dog 2:28
17. The Frown Song 4:04
18. Kylie from Connecticut 5:01

Details

[Edit]

Ben Folds has made a career out of being peeved. As pop/rock’s reigning Bard of the ‘Burbs, he has captured the aggravations of the ordinary guy better than just about anyone. After toning down his satiric side for a few albums, he gets nice and cranky again on 2008’s Way to Normal. Fold’s signature piano is in top form, nailing down the boogiefied beat on “Dr. Yang,” strutting with abandon on “Errant Dog,” and gliding into elegant balladry on “Kylie from Connecticut.” He nods in the direction of Elton John on “Hiroshima” (a semi-spoof of “Bennie and the Jets”) and invokes the robotic New Wave pop of Gary Numan on “You Don’t Know Me” (a playful duet with Regina Spektor). There are sweet moments, most notably the oddly tender “Cologne,” but Folds fans will especially gravitate towards his more pointed numbers, including the nervous “Free Coffee,” the scathing “Errant Dog,” the ultra-irritated “Bitch Went Nuts,” and the standout “Effington,” a portrait of a central Illinois town at once snide and affectionate. Way to Normal returns Folds to familiar turf, which is not a bad thing. His brand of normalcy remains uniquely his own.