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Audio CD review:
Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Everclear reviews here, or go back to the Everclear tabs.
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| Everclear - Songs from an American Movie, Vol. 1: Learning How to Smile |
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Band: Everclear Title: Songs from an American Movie, Vol. 1: Learning How to Smile Rating: Release Date: 2000-07-11 Media: Audio CD Tracks: 1: Song from an American Movie, Pt. 1 2: Here We Go Again 3: A.M. Radio 4: Brown Eyed Girl - Everclear, Morrison, Van 5: Learning How to Smile 6: The Honeymoon Song - Everclear, Eklund 7: Now That It's Over 8: Thrift Store Chair 9: Otis Redding 10: Unemployed Boyfriend 11: Wonderful 12: Annabella's Song |
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4.5 stars, a near-perfect pop album I'm not knocking it, but my tastes tend to run more towards metal and classic rock. It's pretty rare that I pick up a mainstream pop album. Anyway, I took a chance on Everclear's 2000 release Songs from an American Movie, Volume 1 - Learning How to Smile based on the strength of the radio hits Wonderful and A. M. Radio, and was surprised at just how much I enjoyed the album. I was familiar with the band, but the material on this album definitely wasn't the alterna-rocking Everclear I remembered. This is a smart, well-crafted, upbeat pop album that despite what some other reviewers would have you believe actually contains little to no "filler". In fact, aside from the way too tranquil closing track Annabella's Song, the hit single Wonderful is probably the only song that I'm tired of hearing, and that's due more to radio fatigue than anything else. The album is crammed full of fantastic songs, but there are a few that really stand out. A. M. Radio is just a fun track, Now That It's Over is brilliant for having such a dark message in counterpoint to the beautiful music, and Unemployed Boyfriend is one of the better love songs I've heard in a long time. Everclear's version of Brown Eyed Girl is quite good as well. It's a shame the band's follow-up album wasn't as good, or I might have become an Everclear fan. Still, I have to give the band credit for creating a near-perfect pop album that I find myself listening to on a regular basis seven years after its release. How often does that happen with most pop albums? .
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