Create account Log in

Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (10th Anniversary Edition)

[Edit]

Download links and information about Clap Your Hands Say Yeah (10th Anniversary Edition) by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah. This album was released in 2015 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 24:22 minutes.

Artist: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
Release date: 2015
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 24
Duration: 24:22
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on iTunes $10.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Clap Your Hands!
2. Let the Cool Goddess Rust Away 3:24
3. Over and over Again (Lost and Found) 3:09
4. Sunshine and Clouds (And Everything Proud)
5. Details of the War
6. The Skin of My Yellow Country Teeth 5:43
7. Is This Love?
8. Heavy Metal
9. Blue Turning Gray
10. In This Home on Ice
11. Gimmie Some Salt
12. Upon This Tidal Wave of Young Blood
13. Clap Your Hands! (Bonus Track)
14. Let the Cool Goddess Rust Away (Bonus Track) 3:04
15. Over and over Again (Lost and Found) [Bonus Track] 2:40
16. Sunshine and Clouds (And Everything Proud) [Bonus Track]
17. Details of the War (Bonus Track)
18. The Skin of My Yellow Country Teeth (Bonus Track) 6:22
19. Is This Love? (Bonus Track)
20. Heavy Metal (Bonus Track)
21. Blue in the Face (Bonus Track)
22. In This Home on Ice (Bonus Track)
23. Gimmie Some Salt (Bonus Track)
24. Upon This Tidal Wave of Young Blood (Bonus Track)

Details

[Edit]

You've undoubtedly heard of these guys by now. They're all over the Net, and if you don't have a computer, someone who does told you about them. Their story is as much a testament to the power of the grassroots-indie-blog machine as it is a sign of crumbling major-label authority. Self-released, self-promoted, and self-distributed (right down to licking the stamps), Clap Your Hands Say Yeah's self-titled debut is well on its way to selling a respectable 40,000 copies as this review goes to press — and they don't even have a record contract. These Brooklyn-based boys like it that way, too. If there were ever a band who could do a cover of Sinatra's "My Way," and mean it, it's these guys. Theirs is a template for success that every budding Shins or Modest Mouse could do well to follow: work hard, practice hard, play well, and write good songs — the rest will take care of itself. And it did. Heavy hype on the Internet had the guys sending copies of this album to the four corners, just as they were settling into being a band, and when the labels came knocking, these guys just said, "Thank you, we're fine." They are fine. Fine and fun. Their sound is evocative of nearly every indie band you've ever heard of — enough to flick a switch somewhere in your head, but not enough to call them guilty of derivation. A list could be made here, but it would be this reviewer's list — yours would probably look a lot different, and that's fine, too. You might find Talking Heads in there, while someone else hears early solo John Cale. Or you may find Neutral Milk Hotel where someone else finds some Joy Division. It doesn't matter, because that's precisely the band's strongest suit — their ability to sound immediately familiar to everyone while, simultaneously, shrugging off any attempts at direct comparison. If a warbly alto makes you David Byrne, then, yes, there's that aspect of Alec Ounsworth's voice to be reckoned with, but Clap Your Hands Say Yeah deserve better than first impression labeling like this. They simply have made a good record here — one that a great deal of people will find an enjoyable listen. The album opener, "Clap Your Hands!" mixes starry-eyed hopefulness with drunken abandon and serves as a "Step right up!" invitation to join the fellas on their merry ride. It sounds like nothing else on the record, like a weird intro for a mixtape — a scratchy carnival record with the barker announcing the beginning of side one. What follows is good stuff. Poppy, '80s-tinged, and hooky as hell, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah's debut certainly makes for pleasant listening. Those who have read the blogs and heard the hype might well be expecting the second coming. These people will be disappointed and post morose reviews on Amazon: "I was expecting sooooo much, but this album is only 'good.'" That's right! It's good. Not magnificent, not groundbreaking, but it is a new band's first album, and it is good — darn good. There's a ton of potential here — in the songwriting, the musicianship — and it will be interesting to see if Clap Your Hands Say Yeah can Teflon-coat themselves against all the ballyhoo and continue to be impressive on their own terms. [A 10th Anniversary Edition was released in 2015.] ~ J. Scott McClintock, Rovi