Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Eskimo Joe|A Song Is A City

A Song Is A City

Eskimo Joe

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Eskimo Joe's follow-up to their 2001 full-length debut Girl shows the band trying to shake off any expectation as well as the ghosts of their early releases. Simple, even juvenile songs like "Sweater" and "Turn Up Your Stereo" from the late '90s earned Eskimo Joe a place in many an Aussie teenager's brain, but after the modest success of their first album, it became clear that the group was growing up, and so was their music. After the clumsy opener "Come Down" fades, a driving melodic piano line ushers in "From the Sea," still hailed by some as the band's finest hour. Released weeks before the album, this first single signalled the beginning of a new era in more ways than one (Eskimo Joe were dumped from EMI's Modular label and then signed by Festival Mushroom in 2002). Vocalist Kav Temperley revealed that for this album, the band turned to their coastal hometown of Fremantle in Western Australia for inspiration, hence the album's title, and "From the Sea" is a clear indication of this. Bringing in the piano as a focal point on some cuts shows the direction Eskimo Joe are leaning towards, and they extend its use on their third album Black Fingernails, Red Wine. While this album is a little hit-and-miss with catchy pop gems lying next to the aimless ("I'm So Tired") and the wasted ("Carousel"), the trio have put some memorable tunes together. The wonderful ballad "Life Is Better with You" has an uplifting chorus complete with makeshift choir, and although the verses owe much to Neil Young's "Down by the River," it's one of the album's highlights. "Older Than You" is two-and-a-half minutes of radio-friendly pop bliss, and buried towards the end of the record is the rousing Led Zeppelin-tinged rock of "This Room," which provides more fire and grit than anything else here. There are a lot of different influences seeping into the songs, but the leaps from genre to genre weigh the album down, rather than lifting it up, creating a scrapbook of half-realized ideas. "Smoke" which isn't much more than a repeated riff and some falsetto flourishes, could have been a contender and the notion of bookending the album with similarly structured and themed tracks ("Come Done" and "Car Crash") might have worked had more time been spent on the songs themselves and not the production. The good outweighs the bad, however, and A Song Is a City offers a preview into what Eskimo Joe would unveil in the future.

© Clayton Bolger /TiVo

More info

A Song Is A City

Eskimo Joe

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From €13,50/month

1
Come Down
00:03:29

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

2
From The Sea
00:03:22

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

3
Life Is Better With You
00:04:40

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

4
Older Than You
00:02:31

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

5
A Song Is A City
00:03:43

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

6
Don't Let It Fly
00:02:45

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

7
I'm So Tired
00:02:32

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer - Valgeir Sigurdsson, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

8
Seven Veils
00:03:09

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

9
Smoke
00:03:38

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

10
Carousel
00:01:17

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

11
This Room
00:03:32

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

12
Car Crash
00:03:48

Joel Quartermain, Composer - Eskimo Joe, Performance, MainArtist - Kav Temperley, Composer - Stu MacLeod, Composer

© 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd ℗ 2004 Mushroom Records Pty Ltd

Album review

Eskimo Joe's follow-up to their 2001 full-length debut Girl shows the band trying to shake off any expectation as well as the ghosts of their early releases. Simple, even juvenile songs like "Sweater" and "Turn Up Your Stereo" from the late '90s earned Eskimo Joe a place in many an Aussie teenager's brain, but after the modest success of their first album, it became clear that the group was growing up, and so was their music. After the clumsy opener "Come Down" fades, a driving melodic piano line ushers in "From the Sea," still hailed by some as the band's finest hour. Released weeks before the album, this first single signalled the beginning of a new era in more ways than one (Eskimo Joe were dumped from EMI's Modular label and then signed by Festival Mushroom in 2002). Vocalist Kav Temperley revealed that for this album, the band turned to their coastal hometown of Fremantle in Western Australia for inspiration, hence the album's title, and "From the Sea" is a clear indication of this. Bringing in the piano as a focal point on some cuts shows the direction Eskimo Joe are leaning towards, and they extend its use on their third album Black Fingernails, Red Wine. While this album is a little hit-and-miss with catchy pop gems lying next to the aimless ("I'm So Tired") and the wasted ("Carousel"), the trio have put some memorable tunes together. The wonderful ballad "Life Is Better with You" has an uplifting chorus complete with makeshift choir, and although the verses owe much to Neil Young's "Down by the River," it's one of the album's highlights. "Older Than You" is two-and-a-half minutes of radio-friendly pop bliss, and buried towards the end of the record is the rousing Led Zeppelin-tinged rock of "This Room," which provides more fire and grit than anything else here. There are a lot of different influences seeping into the songs, but the leaps from genre to genre weigh the album down, rather than lifting it up, creating a scrapbook of half-realized ideas. "Smoke" which isn't much more than a repeated riff and some falsetto flourishes, could have been a contender and the notion of bookending the album with similarly structured and themed tracks ("Come Done" and "Car Crash") might have worked had more time been spent on the songs themselves and not the production. The good outweighs the bad, however, and A Song Is a City offers a preview into what Eskimo Joe would unveil in the future.

© Clayton Bolger /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Your Mother Should Know: Brad Mehldau Plays The Beatles

Brad Mehldau

Tutu

Miles Davis

Tutu Miles Davis

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By Eskimo Joe

Black Fingernails, Red Wine

Eskimo Joe

For the Greater Good

Eskimo Joe

Girl

Eskimo Joe

Girl Eskimo Joe

The World Repeats Itself Somehow - The Best Of Eskimo Joe

Eskimo Joe

the first time

Eskimo Joe

the first time Eskimo Joe

Playlists

You may also like...

i/o

Peter Gabriel

i/o Peter Gabriel

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Rumours

Fleetwood Mac

Rumours Fleetwood Mac

Now And Then

The Beatles

Now And Then The Beatles

Dark Matter

Pearl Jam

Dark Matter Pearl Jam