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Can we please have fun / Kings of Leon.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: 1000144961 | LoveTap RecordsPublisher: [United States] : LoveTap Records, [2024]Copyright date: ℗©2024Description: 1 audio disc (45 min.) ; 4 3/4 inContent type:
  • performed music
Media type:
  • audio
Carrier type:
  • audio disc
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Ballerina Radio -- Rainbow ball -- Nowhere to run -- Mustang -- Actual daydream -- Split screen -- Don't stop the bleeding -- Nothing to do -- M television -- Hesitation gen -- Ease me on -- Seen.
Production credits:
  • Produced by Kid Harpoon.
Kings of Leon (Caleb, Nathan, Jared, and Matthew Followill).
Audiovisual profile: Click to open in new window
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Northport Library CD New POP/ROCK Kings of Leon Checked out 07/16/2024 33111010022198
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Kings of Leon have always been something of an album rock band, capable of summoning radio hits but just as likely to craft raging, throaty anthems that carry you along on their bloodshot emotions. It's a vibe that works best when they keep things simple, as they do on their ninth studio album, Can We Please Have Fun. The album was produced with a light touch by England's Kid Harpoon, who has brought a grounded, analog sense of taste to albums by Harry Styles, Maggie Rogers, and Florence + the Machine. Here, he largely stays out way -- or perhaps smartly guides Kings of Leon to stay out of their own way and keep things as bare-bones as possible. The album has the raw, athletic feeling of songs being jammed out in a basement and pummeled into shape by repetition and verbal fist fights. Particularly redolent of this raw feeling is "Mustang"; equal parts Iggy & the Stooges and Achtung Baby-era U2, it's easily one of the band's most infectious singles since "Use Somebody" and one that also feels the most like it could have come from their sleazy garage rock debut, Youth & Young Manhood. Elsewhere, the band manage to pull wider influences into their sound without weighing themselves down or slowing the momentum. This is especially true of "Actual Daydream," a Spanish-inflected number that nicely evokes the global art rock of Bruce Cockburn. There's also the fluorescent '80s, adult-contempo balladry of "Split Screen" and the breezy, Jimmy Buffet-meets-George Harrison romanticism of "Ease on Me." Lyrically, the album is as Dada-gritty as any of singer Caleb Followill's past work, punctuated by wry, pseudo-existential ponderings, as in "Mustangs," which asks, "Are you a mustang or a kitty?" Your desire to answer that question may or may not depend on how deeply you spark to the album. Yet, the lyric is playful, Pop Art-provocative, and speaks to the joy, sweat, and poetic inspiration coursing through all of Can We Please Have Fun. ~ Matt Collar

Kings of Leon (Caleb, Nathan, Jared, and Matthew Followill).

Produced by Kid Harpoon.

Compact disc.

Title from disc surface.

Ballerina Radio -- Rainbow ball -- Nowhere to run -- Mustang -- Actual daydream -- Split screen -- Don't stop the bleeding -- Nothing to do -- M television -- Hesitation gen -- Ease me on -- Seen.

Recorded at Dark Horse Recording, Franklin, TN ; Hanson Recording Studios, Hollywood, CA.

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