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State of the Ark

The Ark

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1
This Piece of Poetry Is Meant to Do Harm The Ark 3:27 $0.99 View In iTunes
2
Rock City Wankers The Ark 4:10 $0.99 View In iTunes
3
Clamour for Glamour The Ark 3:10 $0.99 View In iTunes
4
One of Us Is Gonna Die Young The Ark 3:30 $0.99 View In iTunes
5
Let Me Down Gently The Ark 2:58 $0.99 View In iTunes
6
Hey Kwanogoma! The Ark 4:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
7
The Others The Ark 3:27 $0.99 View In iTunes
8
Girl You're Gonna Get 'em (Real Soon) The Ark 3:27 $0.99 View In iTunes
9
Deliver Us from Free Will The Ark 5:09 $0.99 View In iTunes
10
No End The Ark 3:29 $0.99 View In iTunes
11
Trust Is Shareware The Ark 4:25 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

State of the Ark, the Swedish band's third full-length and their first to receive U.S. distribution, is aptly named, as it both summarizes the strengths of their career to date and constitutes a new departure, an innovative technological development for their music and for guitar-based, pop-inclined rock in general. Perhaps the most conspicuous change from their earlier work is the virtual absence of extravagant symphonic and choral bombast, and a corresponding scaling-back of their overt, glam-infused theatricality. In the few instances when an orchestral element is introduced, as with the unison string section on the strutting schaffel opener, "This Piece of Poetry Is Meant to Do Harm," it's understated and playful, rather than melodramatically overblown. There's still plenty of flamboyance to go around — the guitars gleam and crunch, lead singer Ola Salo swoons and soars in his glorious falsetto (more resplendent than ever, thanks to doubling and choral multi-tracking), and he still has plenty of anthemic rabble-rousing on his lyrical agenda — check the pansexual rallying cry "The Others" or the free-agent hedonism of "Deliver Us from Free Will," a delirious, dadaist fusion of rock and disco that's not above indulging in some absurdly operatic backup vocals. (Less coherence equals less didacticism.) At its essence, though, State presents the Ark as a lean, mean, spit-polished rock & roll machine, sounding more than ever like an honest-to-goodness band, albeit a band inclining as close as ever toward their proclivity for pop, with a battery of inexorably danceable beats and a fully-stocked arsenal of synthesizers gilding their meticulously tooled melodic machinations. It feels markedly more electronic than previous Ark albums, and to some extent it is, not just because it swaps synths for symphonics but because of how decidedly processed everything sounds, from the vocals on down (not in an obtrusive or cloyingly "overproduced" way; just enough to create an ultra-modern, slightly otherworldly sheen.) But that's partially just an effect of the band's uncannily crisp delivery — immaculately clean-toned (or fussily fuzzed-up) guitars, deployed with a laser precision — who can say for sure whether the mutating, stereo-bouncing bit of fuzz that opens "Poetry" originated from a keyboard or a guitar? And ultimately who cares, as long as all that persnickety sonic perfection is exploited for the benefit of pop songs as rapturous and spirited as the glistening "One of Us Is Gonna Die Young," rockers as bone-headedly propulsive as "Clamour for Glamour," and ballads as poignant as the transcendently tender "No End." State of the Ark is a tour de force from start to finish, and one of the most perfectly-crafted pop or rock albums, Swedish or otherwise, to appear in the 2000s. ~ K. Ross Hoffman, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

friggin awesome!
     

i'm a bassist in the US, and i like to listen to other people's music to try and find inspiration for good lines or techniques, but nobody writes good lines anymore, or even if it's catchy it's so simple that even a beginner could play it. these guys are TRUE musicians, and actually play their lines so well that they SOUND simple, but are more difficult to play correctly than one would think, much like Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers' lines. I LOVE THESE GUYS!

Ignore the mixed reviews out there
     

If you like your rock with a pinch of pop gloss (think Queen, Bowie, or even AC/DC), you should check this out. The hooks are amazing. The lyrics, while seldom profound, are not embarassing in any way--and that's saying a lot in this genre. If you don't want to risk an entire sawbuck than download the first three cuts plus "Let Me Down Gently," you'll be glad you did.

Good Time Rockin' forever!
     

The album is incredibly fun and catchy, but the true experience is to see them live. Your brain will melt out of your face with exceitment. Easily comparable to the darkness but in no way a match. The Ark is light years beyond, and ready to deliver us from free will. All HAIL THE ARK!

Biography

Formed: 1991 in Sweden

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '90s, '00s

With an image built on '70s glam rock costumes and big gestures, combined with catchy radio-friendly songs, the Ark had a major breakthrough in Sweden in 2000. Before that, few had heard of the band, even if it had been around since 1991, when it was formed by singer Ola Salo, guitarist Jepson, bassist Lasse "Leari" Ljungberg, and drummer Olsson. As a local band, they played small concerts and minor festivals through the '90s, and their EP Racing with the Rabbits got catastrophic reviews, if any....
Full Bio
State of the Ark, The Ark
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Customer Ratings

     
20 Ratings

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