×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0075678731891
$14.77
$14.99
Save 1%
Current price is $14.77, Original price is $14.99. You Save 1%.
View All Available Formats & Editions

CD
Temporarily Out of Stock Online
14.77
Out Of Stock
Overview
Portugal. The Man found the opportunity to work with Brian "Danger Mouse" Burton so important that they scrapped two weeks of recording -- and eight of ten new songs -- in order to start fresh. Changing studio locations from El Paso to Danger Mouse's headquarters in L.A., the collaboration results in the band's most accessible and "mainstream" recording to date. The punchy, rhythm-driven elements in Danger Mouse's production create an elastic tension when contrasted with the band's loopy, hooky, guitar-centric, psych core. He doesn't change their sound, but brightens it, adding textural layers, to make it more dynamic and punchy. Set-opener "Plastic Soldiers" reveals that John Gourley's songwriting, with its wonderfully idiosyncratic world view, remains loaded with signifiers from rock's rich past. Strummed acoustic guitar and synth offer a dreamy intro. A little more than a minute later, the snare and handclaps enter, as do an all but hidden squiggly synth, and strings; the tempo picks up and the groove contrasts sharply with the tune's lyrics. "Creep in a T-Shirt," with its treated vocals, piano, whompy electronic keyboards, and synth horns, offers the trace elements of R&B while never leaving the psych behind. "Purple Yellow Red and Blue" is fingerpopping time -- it's almost funky with a popping bassline, low-end breakbeats, almost shimmering acoustic guitars, chorus-style vocals, a chugging B-3, and piano -- while "Hip Hop Kids" (one of the two songs they kept and re-recorded) isn't, its use of the genre's tight, skittering rhythm, which drives a sprawling meld of distorted electric guitars and washed-out keyboards, is an example of the expansive elements that Danger Mouse brings to the rockist bent in P.TM's aesthetic. The album's hinge track, "Atomic Man," shows the other side: a driving rocker with a near chanted backing chorus and fuzzed-out guitars is brightened considerably with a meaty rim shot snare. Though album-closer "Smile" may be the set's least commercial track, it may also be the finest moment on the entire record. In just under five minutes it combines languid balladry, Baroque pop, a rhythm collision, screaming guitars, and strings. Evil Friends offers ample evidence that the match between Portugal. The Man and Burton expanded the horizons of both parties and will likely heighten the band's profile considerably.
Product Details
Release Date: | 06/04/2013 |
---|---|
Label: | Atlantic |
UPC: | 0075678731891 |
catalogNumber: | 535125 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Portugal. The Man Primary ArtistPhil Peterson Guest Appearance
Brian Burton Guest Appearance
Sonny Diperri Guest Appearance
Este Haim Guest Appearance
Danielle Haim Guest Appearance
Mark Einhorn Guest Appearance
Flora Peterson Guest Appearance
Chris Vanacore Guest Appearance
Chet Peterson Guest Appearance
Technical Credits
Ken Takahashi Programming,EngineerDanger Mouse Composer,Programming,Producer
Casey Bates Engineer
Portugal. The Man Composer
Todd Monfalcone Engineer
Rich Holtzman Management
John Gourley Layout
Kennie Takahashi Programming,Engineer
Sonny Diperri Producer,Engineer
Manny Calderon Engineer
Austin Sellers Layout
Laura Sisk Engineer
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
Tim Rutili's Califone had been mixing trad-minded folk-blues flavors with more experimental inclinations for a ...
Tim Rutili's Califone had been mixing trad-minded folk-blues flavors with more experimental inclinations for a
good decade by the time they put this album together, and the combination has grown increasingly seamless along the way. The electric drones, scrapes, buzzes, ...
Coca Leaf is one of many projects involving Merchandise's Carson Cox and David Vassalotti, this ...
Coca Leaf is one of many projects involving Merchandise's Carson Cox and David Vassalotti, this
time in conjunction with Hubble's Ben Greenberg and the Ukiah Drag's ZZ Ramirez. The four musicians play a hot, hazy blend of dubby post-punk disco, ...
On his third solo full-length for Kranky, Chicago-based space rock guitarist Ken Camden expands his ...
On his third solo full-length for Kranky, Chicago-based space rock guitarist Ken Camden expands his
scope a bit, trying out new techniques while still keeping in line with the meditative explorations of his previous works. His drone-based compositions attempt to ...
An amusing prospect that sounds great on paper but yields mixed results, Sunburned Hand of ...
An amusing prospect that sounds great on paper but yields mixed results, Sunburned Hand of
the Man invited Kieran Hebden, aka Four Tet, to remix some of the ensemble's jam sessions, and somehow managed to come up with their most ...
Technically, Philly's Most Wanted is comprised of rappers Mr. Man and Boo-Bonic, but the real ...
Technically, Philly's Most Wanted is comprised of rappers Mr. Man and Boo-Bonic, but the real
star of the show are the Neptunes, the hot production team that has worked with everyone from Jay-Z to Mystikal to Britney Spears. Their trademark ...
Having released a fascinating if rambling set of experimental pop called Bowler Hat Soup for ...
Having released a fascinating if rambling set of experimental pop called Bowler Hat Soup for
his debut at age 18, Kiran Leonard follows up a little over two years later with even more challenging, impulsive-sounding indie rock on Grapefruit. While ...
Self Defense Family have made a career -- or at very least a successful ongoing ...
Self Defense Family have made a career -- or at very least a successful ongoing
art project -- out of questioning the accepted notions of what punk rock is supposed to be. They play smart, challenging, thought-provoking music without buying ...
This philosophical follow-up to Duncan Sheik's 1996 star-making debut sprawls across similarly introspective terrain, yet
veers more toward the pragmatic than the romantic. Musically, Humming has a more profound and resonant base, complemented by accentuated drums and various string elements. ...