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Phantom Planet

Phantom Planet

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1
The Happy Ending Phantom Planet 3:18 $0.99 View In iTunes
2
Badd Business Phantom Planet 2:16 $0.99 View In iTunes
3
Big Brat Phantom Planet 3:21 $0.99 View In iTunes
4
1st Things 1st Phantom Planet 2:51 $0.99 View In iTunes
5
Making a Killing Phantom Planet 2:40 $0.99 View In iTunes
6
You're Not Welcome Here Phantom Planet 3:26 $0.99 View In iTunes
7
By the Bed Phantom Planet 3:38 $0.99 View In iTunes
8
Knowitall Phantom Planet 4:01 $0.99 View In iTunes
9
Jabberjaw Phantom Planet 3:13 $0.99 View In iTunes
10
After Hours Phantom Planet 2:43 $0.99 View In iTunes
11
The Meantime Phantom Planet 3:43 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Phantom Planet's self-titled third album finds the group turning its backs on the manicured pop of The Guest, which spawned the hit (and theme song for Fox TV's The O.C.) "California," in favor of a sound influenced by garagey New York bands like the Strokes. Alex Greenwald's formerly earnest croon is now a surly, slurry sneer, and the rest of the band follows suit, adopting a scuzzy sound as effortlessly as donning battered jean jackets and skinny ties. Phantom Planet's production is particularly striking, and strange: its cheap, compressed sound seems like it should be the work of someone like Strokes producer Gordon Raphael, but it's actually sonic mastermind Dave Fridmann behind the knobs. Why the band used one of rock's most intricate producers to emulate one of its most basic is something of a mystery, but Fridmann brings as much care to making Phantom Planet sound like they recorded this in the garage as he does to making other bands sound like they recorded their music on other planets. It's difficult to determine just how savvy the band's garage rock makeover is, but Phantom Planet isn't a bad fusion of noisy rock and the kind of music they were doing before. It works especially well when the band hangs on to the melodic sensibilities that made The Guest's best moments memorable: "The Happy Ending" kick starts the album with equal amounts of pummeling drums and bittersweetly ragged vocals; "1st Things 1st" is a model of aggressive, economical melody; and "The Meantime" rivals almost anything that appeared on Room on Fire. But while songs like "Badd Business" and "Jabberjaw" might be tighter and rock harder than their previous work, it's at the price of the melodies that used to be the band's strongest asset. These melodies return on the second half of Phantom Planet, which is nearly as pretty and atmospheric as the first half is raucous and dense. This sequencing tends to work against the album — keeping the loud side loud and the quiet side quiet results in an album that is, on first listen, alternately over- and underwhelming. Nevertheless, both Fridmann and the band have some of their best moments on "By the Bed," "After Hours," and "Knowitall," all of which have as much impact, if not more, than the loudest songs and reaffirm that Phantom Planet really are a pop band at heart. The late-blooming acclaim for Guster and Fountains of Wayne, and of course, Phantom Planet's own success with "California" shows that there's always a place for well-crafted, unapologetically pop music. But this willfully noisy, messy album is ultimately just as contrived as the band's glossier sound was, and the shift from The Guest's winsome pop — which was also a shift from their debut's heavily Weezer-influenced sound — makes it difficult to get a grip on the band. Their O.C. fan base will probably miss their previous sound, and those who follow the garage rock bands may not accept Phantom Planet as that kind of group. Phantom Planet is by no means a bad album, but it is a slightly strange and frustrating one.

Customer Reviews

This album is perfect.
     

I hated Phantom Planet is missing, and The Guest is pretty good. But to me, this is the best album the band has ever done and possibly will ever do. This album pulled off the scummy garage rock sound off so well that it is amazing at how good it was done. The first time I heard Big Brat I wondered. Who is this? When I saw it was Phantom Planet I thought there was a mistake. I was used to the sunny pop California OC Fan driven Phantom Planet. But this new Phantom Planet I loved. I bought this album the day it came out and fell in love with it. Every song seems to have it's own unique sound. This band pulled off a sound change brilliantly. I love every song on this album. I pray that their new album sounds like this one, and hasn't gone back to the pop sound. This band could do wonders with this sound and they need to realize that. I hope their new album, has this heavy, garage sound. Long live Rock And Roll! - Coz

Cant Wait for Album 4
     

This CD blew me away. What a departure from The Guest, and a great departure at that. This album is so much fun. If you love rock'n'roll, I highly suggest buying this album.

All the songs are awesome, but the highlights for me are Big Brat, 1st Things 1st, By The Bed, After Hours and The Meantime. Yeah, the highlights are pretty much half the album. That is only because it is so bad@ss

Best of them all
     

This is, by far, the best of PP's albums. I just recently listenened to some tracks from Negatives, the new album, and it's quite disappointing that they obviously gave into popular pressures and went back to their surf pop sound, which, while pleasant, does not even come close to what they are capable of - what is demonstrated on this record. I'll just keep on listening to this one until they release some better material that's not driven by their label or the OC fans' pressure.

Buy it.

Biography

Formed: 1994 in Los Angeles, CA

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s

L.A.'s Phantom Planet formed at a local Pizza Hut in 1994, years before the bandmates' association with The O.C. helped catapult their mix of power pop songcraft and indie rock guitars into the mainstream. During the band's early stages, members Jacques Brautbar (guitar), Sam Farrar (bass), Alex Greenwald (vocals/guitar), Darren Robinson (guitar), and Jason Schwartzman (drums) played around with post-grunge stylings while taking their name from a 1960s sci-fi film. The band's moniker wasn't the only...
Full Bio
Phantom Planet, Phantom Planet
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Customer Ratings

     
14 Ratings

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