The Sun and the Moon
05/22/2007 | Island
Lyrics from The Sun and the Moon
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All Music Guide Review
Like many of-the-moment bands, the Bravery know that yesterday's trends are today's trash. And, like the band's former sparring partners and fellow new wave revivalists the Killers, the Bravery move away from the style that made them famous (or, at the very least, incorporate new sounds into their music) on their second album. Unlike the Killers, who cross-pollinated their love for Bruce Springsteen, U2, and the mythic American West into the rambling but intriguing Sam's Town, on The Sun and the Moon the Bravery try different ideas on for size, but don't commit enough to make them completely convincing. The band spends a significant chunk of the album trying to be as serious and earnest as they were stylish and giddy on The Bravery. On "Time Won't Let Me Go," they adopt a more mainstream rock sound, ditch the synths, and even name-drop Bryan Adams' "Summer of '69" in the lyrics; "The Ocean" delivers strings, acoustic guitars, and all the other trappings of a formerly fun band getting too serious for their own good. Worst of all is "Tragedy Bound," a song about loving a damaged woman that has questionable lyrics like "I'm starting to suspect she likes the abuse." Elsewhere on The Sun and the Moon, the band delivers competent pop songs that fall just short of being truly memorable; "Bad Sun," which could pass for a Dandy Warhols B-side, is the best of the bunch. In between all of their attempted makeovers, the Bravery return to their bracing, '80s-inspired sound, albeit with sleeker, slicker production than on their debut. And while "Every Word Is a Knife in My Ear" is melodramatic and "Split Me Wide Open" is pure Cure pastiche, this is still the sound that the Bravery seem to feel the most, and do the best. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide
The Sun and the Moon User Reviews
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posted on Mon, 19 Nov 2007 11:43:19The Bravery - both LPs
To make reference to the fact that The Bravery harkens back to the awesome breakthrough 80's sound would be stating the obvious. So there it is. More specifically, shades of the Cure (Robert Smith's vocals), REM guitar riffs and occasioanl U2 arrangements haunts their album tracks from both LPs. Yes, I refuse to say DVDs, so blech! All in all, a groovy new sound with a very familiar neo romatic, fatalistic longing. I love them!
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The Sun and the Moon Track Listing
Credits of The Sun and the Moon
- Michael Barreto Hindert
- Bass, Vocals (Background), Group Member
- Stephen Penta
- Cover Photo
- Brendan O'Brien
- Producer, Mixing
- Robert Stevenson
- A&R
- Andy West
- Art Direction
- Billy Bowers
- Engineer
- Suzie Katayama
- Contractor
- Sam Endicott
- Guitar, Vocals, Group Member
- Eddie Horst
- Conductor, String Arrangements
- Andy Ackland
- Engineer
- Anthony Burulcich
- Vocals (Background), Drums, Group Member
- Nic Hard
- Engineer
- Tom Tapley
- Assistant
- Glenn Pittman
- Assistant
- John Conway
- Keyboards, Programming, Vocals (Background), Group Member
- Michael Zakarin
- Guitar, Vocals (Background), Group Member
- Tom Syrowski
- Assistant
- James Oldham
- A&R
- A.J. Benson
- A&R
- Alex Gibson
- Engineer
- Patti Horst
- Contractor
- Paul Buckmaster
- Conductor
- Nick DiDia
- Engineer
























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