Pages

Monday

Making Mirrors

Making Mirrors
~ Gotye
4.5 out of 5 stars(24)
Release Date: January 31, 2012

Buy new: $9.99
31 used & new from $9.46

(Get More Details Hot New Releases in Music list for authoritative You better read this Making Mirrors one before you go to another website! We provide a complete information on music.)

Product Description

Belgian-Aussie artist Gotye (Wally de Backer) delivers a good art-pop manuscript in a form of Making Mirrors. If we like your song original, interesting, with torpedo hooks and an catchy point afterwards this is for you. Standout track, Someone That we Used to Know has only turn a biggest offered Australian record given Savage Garden's Truly Madly Deeply in 1995. You won't bewail this album, you'll wear it out.

Track Listing

  1. Making Mirrors
  2. Easy Way Out
  3. Somebody That we Used To Know
  4. Eyes Wide Open
  5. Smoke And Mirrors
  6. I Feel Better
  7. In Your Light
  8. State Of The Art
  9. Don't Worry, We'll Be Watching You
  10. Giving Me A Chance
  11. Save Me
  12. Bronte


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #15 in Music
  • Released on: 2012-01-31
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .14 pounds


 Making Mirrors

Customer Reviews

Most useful patron reviews

24 of 25 people found a following examination helpful.
44.5 stars... Gotye breaks out


By Paul Allaer


Gotye (pronounced: go-ti-yay) is a theatre moniker of Belgium-born Wally de Backer, who changed to Australia during a immature age and it is there that he built his low-pitched career. Gotye has been during it for a series of years as partial of a Aussie rope a Basics though also arising several solo albums: in 2003 there was "Boardface" and in 2006 "Like Drawing Blood" (remixed a subsequent year as "Mixed Blood"). Now after a 5 year deficiency comes a new album. If you're not informed with a sound of Gotye, a best comparison we can consider of would be a strangely appealing brew of Beck, George Michael and Seal, if we can trust that.

"Making Mirrors" (originally expelled in August, 2011; 12 tracks; 42 min.) starts off with a 1 min. appetiser that is a pretension track, usually afterwards afterwards dive into "Easy Way Out". The third lane is "Somebody That we Used to Know", a duet with New Zealand thespian Kimbra, and a singular that has propelled this manuscript out of shade final year into a megahit in Australia and Europe (check out also a video of this song, not to be missed!). "Smoke and Mirrors" is an irresitable stomper. "I Feel Better" sounds like Motown-revisted. "Don't Worry, We'll Be Watching You" is a reggae tune. The low-pitched flavors are all over on this album, and as a outcome this is a really diverse-sounding and immensly beguiling Gotye album.

This manuscript was expelled outward a US final August. we picked adult a earthy CD on a new home revisit to Belgium, where a manuscript stays a tip seller 5 months after a release. While a manuscript has been accessible as an import here on Amazon, a manuscript is finally removing a correct recover in a US in early 2012. It's not too late to burst on a Gotye rope wagon! His arriving US debate is already sole out in many venues. Meanwhile "Making Mirrors" is rarely recommended!

6 of 6 people found a following examination helpful.
5Exceptional record. One of a best of 2012 so far...


By Jonathan M. Victor


I bought this for a singles Somebody we Used to Know and Easy Way Out. Those songs are great, though we was gratified when we found that a rest of a front is an comprehensive treasure. In fact, we consider any lane is fantastic, save for maybe a brief opener. I'm repelled during how good any strain is, and equally repelled to examination a examination on here that says something along a lines of any strain sounding a same. we don't consider that could be serve from a truth! Gotye skips genres or during slightest influences from one strain to a next. Easy Way Out reminds me of a Beck jam, Somebody that we Used to Know could be any one of a good many songwriters. The lyrics are pristine and honest, prolongation is meagre during first... and grows as a strain progresses with a powerhouse outspoken opening on a choruses. Equally absolute vocals on a subsequent track, Eyes Wide Open, that reminds me presumably of Bryan Ferry/Roxy Music. The next, Smoke & Mirrors, is admittedly my substantially slightest favorite on a disc, though is still value a listen. The subsequent dual marks take a really certain and upbeat turn. we Feel Better sounds like Motown during it's best/happiest with it's synthesized horns and vocals in a capillary of Smokey Robinson. In Your Light is equally passionate with horns and a sharp-witted outspoken and eager keyboards. After that, State of a Art is a waggish lane with strange prolongation that reminds me of Ween's really best work. The subsequent (Don't Worry... We'll Be Watching) is a gangling electronica lane with a pleasing creeping bassline and misty electric sounds behind. The final 3 marks all have a pleasing unhappy to them though all have their possess flow. The closer Bronte is a beautifully romantic square demonstrative of what Gotye seems best during - holding a rather elementary or standard theme and formulating a pleasing square of strain out of. He takes a simplest, many simple building blocks of a strain and places them during a core of a music, weaving simply effective layers around those. This front is an instance of mastering that craft. It's a best record we consider I've listened in a final year or more. Truly a good square of work. Listen to it with headphones and compensate attention. You will be severely rewarded.

19 of 25 people found a following examination helpful.
5Brilliant!


By D. James


Belgian-Aussie artist Gotye (Wally de Backer) delivers a good art-pop manuscript in a form of Making Mirrors. If we like your strain original, interesting, with torpedo hooks and an catchy point afterwards this is for you. Standout track, Someone That we Used to Know has only turn a biggest offered Australian record given Savage Garden's Truly Madly Deeply in 1995. You won't bewail this album, you'll wear it out.

See all 25 patron reviews...

 Making Mirrors

0 comments:

Post a Comment