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Byrne and Eno explore the sunny side
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With Byrne providing lyrics and tunes for Eno's music and arrangements the duo have instead created a sunny collection of "folk-electronic-gospel" songs. Their sonic religion is more warming spiritual atmosphere than Bible-style testifying, with occasional undercurrents of country croons and everyman singalongs shaping Byrne's melodies. This gives the digital album a blithe uplift even when the lyrics veer darker, toward war and car crashes.
The horn blasts of "Life Is Long" and cosmic strums of "My Big Nurse" stroll along with a hopeful tunefulness that - like "The River" - recalls latter-day Heads material. "Wanted for Life" feels like a Cars track filtered through Eno's quirk-pop.
Repeat listens uncover layers of adventure below the lightness - the trippy, razored edginess of "I Feel My Stuff," the muted, healing angles of "One Fine Day" - as the album moves toward "The Lighthouse," its floating cloud of a coda. Once the subtle charms of "Everything" dig in, the effects are long-lasting.
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