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It's a long time since the halcyon days of fame and hype for this strangely-named band (the five words were originally graffiti on a Brooklyn wall) led by a boy named Alec Ounsworth. 2005 saw a first album hailed by the critics and celebrated by Pitchfork, the music site of record. David Bowie and David Byrne were spotted at Clap Your Hands Say Yeah concerts. The years went by and four members successively left the ship, but its founder and leader has not said - or sung - his last word... Self-released, New Fragility - turns out to be also a new strength. Its ten lively tracks, go back over events that have affected Ounsworth: like a massacre in Southern California, on the twilit Thousand Oaks, or a reflection on feelings of exhaustion at the state and slide of a lost America on Hesitating Nation. A lover of fine literature, Ounsworth has also chosen the title of this album probably as a tribute and a nod to an essay by the enfant terrible of American literature, David Foster Wallace, who passed away in 2008. The album's title track, New Fragility, sounds astonishingly like an old U2 number from the 80s, in the era of The Unforgettable Fire (1984): right from the start, a shearing synth sound opens the way, followed by the drums... But Ounsworth's voice is far from that of the Irish tenor, rather close to a Thom Yorke, plaintive, carrying his share of melancholy like a flower in the buttonhole, and disillusioned, as on Mirror Song which is full of memories and regrets. Because this album also deals with a personal crisis following an intense but terribly destructive relationship, which left the singer with a bruised soul, certain tracks sing of our hero's sadness, such as Went Looking For Trouble or Where They Perform Miracles. Alec Ounsworth proves with this record that once the hype has ebbed away, other things remain, which can be more essential, and more relevant. This is in any case the feeling one is left with by this album. The most convincing example is probably CYHSY, 2005, a kind of yellowed polaroid from the past, which leaves a bitter taste in the singer's mouth as he realises that all this was not necessarily what he had wanted... © Yan Céh / Qobuz
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Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Lyricist
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, MainArtist, MusicPublisher - Alexander John Ounsworth, Composer
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
Album review
It's a long time since the halcyon days of fame and hype for this strangely-named band (the five words were originally graffiti on a Brooklyn wall) led by a boy named Alec Ounsworth. 2005 saw a first album hailed by the critics and celebrated by Pitchfork, the music site of record. David Bowie and David Byrne were spotted at Clap Your Hands Say Yeah concerts. The years went by and four members successively left the ship, but its founder and leader has not said - or sung - his last word... Self-released, New Fragility - turns out to be also a new strength. Its ten lively tracks, go back over events that have affected Ounsworth: like a massacre in Southern California, on the twilit Thousand Oaks, or a reflection on feelings of exhaustion at the state and slide of a lost America on Hesitating Nation. A lover of fine literature, Ounsworth has also chosen the title of this album probably as a tribute and a nod to an essay by the enfant terrible of American literature, David Foster Wallace, who passed away in 2008. The album's title track, New Fragility, sounds astonishingly like an old U2 number from the 80s, in the era of The Unforgettable Fire (1984): right from the start, a shearing synth sound opens the way, followed by the drums... But Ounsworth's voice is far from that of the Irish tenor, rather close to a Thom Yorke, plaintive, carrying his share of melancholy like a flower in the buttonhole, and disillusioned, as on Mirror Song which is full of memories and regrets. Because this album also deals with a personal crisis following an intense but terribly destructive relationship, which left the singer with a bruised soul, certain tracks sing of our hero's sadness, such as Went Looking For Trouble or Where They Perform Miracles. Alec Ounsworth proves with this record that once the hype has ebbed away, other things remain, which can be more essential, and more relevant. This is in any case the feeling one is left with by this album. The most convincing example is probably CYHSY, 2005, a kind of yellowed polaroid from the past, which leaves a bitter taste in the singer's mouth as he realises that all this was not necessarily what he had wanted... © Yan Céh / Qobuz
About the album
- 1 disc(s) - 10 track(s)
- Total length: 00:40:56
- Main artists: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
- Composer: Alexander John Ounsworth
- Label: Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
- Genre: Pop/Rock Rock Alternative & Indie
2021 CYHSY 2021 CYHSY
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