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Album Details  :  Yeah Yeah Yeahs    11 Albums     Reviews: 

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Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Allmusic Biography : Discovered in the wake of the Strokes popularity and the subsequent garage rock revival, New Yorks art punk trio the Yeah Yeah Yeahs are comprised of singer Karen O, guitarist Nicolas Zinner, and drummer Brian Chase. O met Chase at Ohios Oberlin College and met Zinner through friends after she transferred to NYU. Zinner and O formed the band in 2000; originally, they were a folky duo called Unitard, but they went electric after being inspired by Ohios legendary avant punk scene. After the drummer they recruited initially bowed out, Chase joined the lineup.

The Yeah Yeah Yeahs wrote a slew of songs at their first rehearsal and soon wound up supporting the Strokes and the White Stripes, earning a significant buzz for their arty yet sexy take on garage punk. In late 2001, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs released their self-titled debut EP, which they recorded with Boss Hogs Jerry Teel, on their own Shifty label. Early the next year the band stepped into the international spotlight, appearing at South by Southwest, touring the U.S. with Girls Against Boys and Europe with Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, and headlining their own U.K. tour. Wichita Recordings distributed the groups EP in the U.K. and Touch & Go reissued it in the States.

In between tours, the group spent 2002 putting the finishing touches on its full-length debut and playing American dates with Sleater-Kinney, Liars, and Jon Spencer Blues Explosion. Late that year, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs released the Machine EP to tide fans over before their first full-length. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs moved to Interscope for their debut album, 2003s Fever to Tell. Boasting a cleaner sound and more eclectic songwriting than their EPs, the album continued their critical acclaim and also won them a fair amount of commercial success: the gorgeous ballad "Maps" became a hit in 2004 and pushed Fever to Tell to gold status that year. Karen O also moved to Los Angeles in 2004, making the Yeah Yeah Yeahs a bicoastal band.

The group took some time to pursue individual projects in 2005. O loaned her vocals to "Hello Tomorrow," a collaboration with producer Squeak E. Clean that provided the soundtrack to a Nike shoe commercial directed by Spike Jonze, while Zinner recorded with the side project Head Wound City and also had a book of photographs, I Hope You Are All Happy Now, published. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs reconvened in the studio that year to record their second album with Clean as producer; jokingly, Clean said that the album was about Os cat and would be called Coco Beware, but the albums real title, Show Your Bones, was revealed soon after. Released in spring 2006, the album was the bands most mature, polished work yet, and reached number 11 on the album charts.

The Yeah Yeah Yeahs spent the rest of the year touring in support of the album, and returned in summer 2007 with the Is Is EP, a collection of newly recorded versions of songs written in between the bands two albums. Its Blitz!, which took the bands sound in a more streamlined, electronic direction, arrived in spring 2009. For 2013s harder-edged Mosquito, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs reunited with producers David Sitek and Nick Launay, and collaborated with James Murphy and Kool Keith.
yeah_yeah_yeahs Album: 1 of 11
Title:  Yeah Yeah Yeahs
Released:  2002-04-22
Tracks:  5
Duration:  13:49

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1   Bang  (03:09)
2   Mystery Girl  (02:57)
3   Art Star  (02:00)
4   Miles Away  (02:20)
5   Our Time  (03:23)
machine Album: 2 of 11
Title:  Machine
Released:  2002-11-05
Tracks:  3
Duration:  07:04

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1   Machine  (03:16)
2   Graveyard  (01:29)
3   Pin (remix)  (02:19)
mini_album Album: 3 of 11
Title:  Mini Album
Released:  2003-03-04
Tracks:  8
Duration:  00:00

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1   Bang  (?)
2   Mystery Girl  (?)
3   Art Star  (?)
4   Miles Away  (?)
5   Our Time  (?)
6   Pin (remix)  (?)
7   Machine  (?)
8   Graveyard  (?)
fever_to_tell Album: 4 of 11
Title:  Fever to Tell
Released:  2003-04-28
Tracks:  11
Duration:  37:35

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1   Rich  (03:36)
2   Date With the Night  (02:35)
3   Man  (01:50)
4   Tick  (01:49)
5   Black Tongue  (02:59)
6   Pin  (02:01)
7   Cold Light  (02:16)
8   No No No  (05:15)
9   Maps  (03:39)
10  Y Control  (04:01)
11  Modern Romance / Poor Song  (07:28)
Fever to Tell : Allmusic album Review : On their EPs, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs grew considerably, moving from the arty yet anthemic garage punk of their self-titled EP to Machines angular urgency. Fever to Tell, their first full-length and major-label debut, also shows growth, but for the first time the band doesnt sound completely in control of the proceedings. Their EPs were masterful studies in contrast and economy, balancing just the right amounts of noise, melody, chaos, and structure within 15 to 20 minutes. At 37 minutes long, Fever to Tell sounds, at different times, scattered and monotonous. Most of this is due to poor sequencing -- the album opens with some of the raunchiest noise the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have ever recorded, then abruptly changes gears and delivers a kitchen sinks worth of pretty ballads and experimental pieces. Both the old and new sides of the bands sound offer brilliant and frustrating moments: "Rich" is a sneering sugar-mommy story; "Black Tongue," which features the great lyric "lets do this like a prison break," is almost Hasil Adkins-esque in its screwed-up sexuality and rockabilly licks. "Date with the Night," a rattling, screeching joy ride of a song, combines Karen Os unearthly vocals, Nick Zinners ever-expanding guitar prowess, and Brian Chases powerful drumming in dynamic ways. Not so good are the insanely noisy "Man" and "Tick," which have enough volume and attitude to make the Kills and Jon Spencer turn pale, but also sound like theyre coasting on those qualities. The moody, romantic songs on Fever to Tell are the most genuine. "Pin" and "Y Control" have a bittersweet bounciness, while the unabashedly gorgeous, sentimental "Maps" is not only among the bands finest work but one of the best indie/punk love songs in a long, long time. Along with "Modern Romance," a pretty but vaguely sinister meditation on the lack thereof, these songs compensate for some of Fever to Tells missteps (such as "No No No," a lengthy, halting mishmash of punk and dubby experimentalism). Perhaps they shouldve included some of their tried-and-tested songs from their EPs, but for a group this mercurial, that would probably be stagnation. Though this is their debut album, Fever to Tell almost feels like a transitional release; theyre already rethinking their sound in radical ways. Even when theyre uneven, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs are still an exciting band.
sessions_aol Album: 5 of 11
Title:  Sessions@AOL
Released:  2004-04-27
Tracks:  2
Duration:  07:13

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1   Maps  (03:56)
2   Our Time  (03:17)
show_your_bones Album: 6 of 11
Title:  Show Your Bones
Released:  2006-03-27
Tracks:  12
Duration:  42:19

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1   Gold Lion  (03:06)
2   Way Out  (02:51)
3   Fancy  (04:24)
4   Phenomena  (04:10)
5   Honeybear  (02:25)
6   Cheated Hearts  (03:58)
7   Dudley  (03:41)
8   Mysteries  (02:35)
9   The Sweets  (03:55)
10  Warrior  (03:42)
11  Turn Into  (04:05)
12  Déjà Vu  (03:22)
Show Your Bones : Allmusic album Review : As explosive as they seem on the surface, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs are also an ambitious, thoughtful band and keep pushing the boundaries of their music. They moved from the rawness of their early EPs to the polished art-punk of their first full-length in just over two years, and this drive to keep topping themselves led to breakthroughs like Fever to Tells gorgeous ballad, and hit single, "Maps." After taking three years to follow up Fever to Tell, and scrapping many of the songs that they wrote while on tour supporting that album, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs returned with Show Your Bones, the yin to their debut albums yang. While Fever to Tell and "Maps" dealt with falling in love (and being more than a little freaked out about it), Show Your Bones is a breakup album. If the Yeah Yeah Yeahs had made this album earlier in their career, Karen Os cutting lyrics and Nick Zinners choppy guitars wouldve sliced the poor ex to pieces; after all, on "Bang," from their self-titled debut EP, they (hilariously) wrote off a lame one-night stand with "as a f*ck, son, you sucked." Show Your Bones, however, tries to go much deeper than that. The albums rockers are surprisingly restrained: the cryptic lead single "Gold Lion" (sounding like a mash-up of Love and Rockets "No New Tale to Tell" and Siouxsie and the Banshees "Peek a Boo"), which eventually worms its way into listeners heads, is surprisingly subdued compared to previous singles. Aptly enough for the kind of album it is, Show Your Bones softer songs are some of its strongest: "Dudley" sounds a bit like Sonic Youth covering the nursery rhyme "Hush, Little Baby," while "Cheated Hearts" is a big, rousing ballad in the vein of "Maps." And, as on Fever to Tell, the band loosens up as Show Your Bones unfolds. "Mysteries" is a jealous cowpunk number that sounds tossed off, but has more bite and fun in it than the rest of the album. On "Turn Into," they take this twangy sound and turn it sweet, resulting in one of their best songs yet. However, too often heartache overtakes the bands sass and attitude on Show Your Bones. Actually, sass and attitude sound like the perfect antidote to heartache -- and, quite possibly, what ails the Yeah Yeah Yeahs.
live_session_ep_itunes_exclusive Album: 7 of 11
Title:  Live Session EP (iTunes Exclusive)
Released:  2006-08-22
Tracks:  4
Duration:  16:04

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1   Cheated Hearts  (03:38)
2   Diamond Sea  (04:33)
3   Gold Lion  (03:25)
4   Turn Into  (04:28)
is_is Album: 8 of 11
Title:  Is Is
Released:  2007-07-23
Tracks:  5
Duration:  17:35

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1   Rockers to Swallow  (03:11)
2   Down Boy  (03:54)
3   Kiss, Kiss  (02:45)
4   Isis  (04:00)
5   10 X 10  (03:44)
its_blitz Album: 9 of 11
Title:  It’s Blitz!
Released:  2009-03-08
Tracks:  10
Duration:  41:45

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1   Zero  (04:25)
2   Heads Will Roll  (03:42)
3   Soft Shock  (03:53)
4   Skeletons  (05:02)
5   Dull Life  (04:08)
6   Shame and Fortune  (03:31)
7   Runaway  (05:13)
8   Dragon Queen  (04:02)
9   Hysteric  (03:52)
10  Little Shadow  (03:57)
It’s Blitz! : Allmusic album Review : Never content to stay in one musical place for very long, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs take their restlessness to the limit on Its Blitz! -- and wind up making some of their most contented-sounding songs. As if to prove one more time that theyre not just the architects of New Yorks early-2000s rock renaissance, Karen O, Nick Zinner, and Brian Chase strip away the guitars and explosive dynamics of their early work even more thoroughly here than they did on Show Your Bones. In their place are shiny keyboards, synthetic sounds galore, and a very different kind of energy. Its Blitz!s images of a womans hand bursting an egg and fleshy tomatoes and mushrooms spread across an otherwise empty pizza box are surprising, immediate, and strangely sensual, and that goes double for the actual music.

The albums first three songs are a blitz of bliss, especially "Zero," which kicks things off with blatantly fake beats, revved-up synth arpeggios, and Os command to "get your leather on." Radiating joy and confidence, she and the rest of the band couldnt be further from Show Your Bones introspection as the song climbs to ecstatic heights. "Heads Will Roll" shows just how ably the Yeah Yeah Yeahs blend their rock firepower with dance surroundings, as Zinners prickly guitars get equal time with spooky synth strings and O makes "you are chrome" sound like the coolest compliment ever. Meanwhile, "Soft Shock"s dreamy, almost naïve-sounding electronics make Os vocals -- which are much less affected than ever before -- feel even more natural and vulnerable. Elsewhere, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and producers David Sitek and Nick Launay find other ways to shake things up, from the disco kiss chase of "Dragon Queen," which features Siteks fellow TV on the Radio member Tunde Adebimpe on backing vocals, to "Shame and Fortune," which pares down the bands tough, sexy rock to its most vital essence and provides Chase and Zinner with a showcase not found anywhere else on the album.

However, Its Blitz!s bold moments are a bit misleading: the albums heart is often soft and searching, offering some of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs quietest work yet. This approach doesnt always work, as on the too-long "Runaway," but when it connects, the results are gorgeous. "Skeletons" is luminous with an oddly Celtic-tinged synth part; "Hysteric," a love song about being happy with someone rather than trying to make him or her stay, feels like the mirror twin of "Maps." The serenity in Its Blitz!s ballads feels worlds apart from Show Your Bones in a much less obvious way than the albums outbursts. But between the violently happy songs and the softer ones, this is some of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs most balanced and cohesive music.
itunes_originals Album: 10 of 11
Title:  iTunes Originals
Released:  2009-10-20
Tracks:  21
Duration:  55:59

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1   iTunes Originals  (00:03)
2   Its the Year to Be Hated (Interview)  (02:39)
3   Our Time (iTunes Originals version) (acoustic)  (03:08)
4   A Love Song in the Truest Sense (Interview)  (02:28)
5   Maps (iTunes Originals version) (acoustic)  (03:49)
6   Conga Line Around a Dead Dog (Interview)  (01:34)
7   Y Control  (04:02)
8   The Studio as Laboratory (Interview)  (02:29)
9   Gold Lion  (03:08)
10  Back From the Dead (Interview)  (01:11)
11  Cheated Hearts  (03:58)
12  Darker Side of Yeah Yeah Yeahs (Interview)  (01:41)
13  Down Boy  (03:54)
14  Something Tangy, Something Sour (Interview)  (01:16)
15  Dull Life (iTunes Originals version) (acoustic)  (03:47)
16  Glam Rock Murder on the Dancefloor (Interview)  (01:30)
17  Heads Will Roll  (03:42)
18  Rewarding Love Song (Interview)  (01:26)
19  Hysteric (iTunes Originals version) (acoustic)  (04:10)
20  Range of Musicianship (Interview)  (01:28)
21  Runaway (iTunes Originals version) (acoustic)  (04:36)
mosquito Album: 11 of 11
Title:  Mosquito
Released:  2013-04-12
Tracks:  11
Duration:  47:36

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1   Sacrilege  (03:50)
2   Subway  (05:16)
3   Mosquito  (02:59)
4   Under the Earth  (04:18)
5   Slave  (04:06)
6   These Paths  (05:03)
7   Area 52  (02:54)
8   Buried Alive  (05:16)
9   Always  (04:06)
10  Despair  (04:49)
11  Wedding Song  (04:54)
Mosquito : Allmusic album Review : Since Fever to Tell, with each album the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have challenged their audience with their changes, and Mosquito is no exception. A 180 from Its Blitz!s flashy electro sheen, the bands fourth album downplays synths, programmed beats, and other gadgetry in favor of drums, guitars, and a mix of rock and inward-looking ballads that occasionally recalls Show Your Bones. Karen O, Nick Zinner, and Brian Chase reunite with longtime producers David Sitek and Nick Launay -- who were honorary members of the band by this point -- and they take the trio in any direction they want to go. Since "Maps," some of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs most exciting songs show their vulnerability, and to a certain extent, this is true of Mosquito. O sounds full-throated and full-hearted as she sings "your sun is my sun" on "Despair," the kind of unabashed love song the band has excelled at since that breakthrough power ballad. Likewise, "Wedding Song" -- which O actually sang at her nuptials -- is genuine and intimate enough to strike a near-universal chord. At other times, the bands quieter side just doesnt connect: while "Subway" cleverly loops samples of the train into its percussion, its a little too successful at capturing an introspective mood; the sparkling, vaguely exotica-tinged "Always" is pretty, but doesnt ring as true as the better love songs here. Meanwhile, Mosquitos loudest songs are more playfully nostalgic than ferocious, which in its own way is in keeping with the albums often reflective tone. "Area 52" and the title track spin tales about aliens and bloodsucking bugs that are much sillier than the Yeah Yeah Yeahs early days; as impressive as Os wail still is, theres a campiness to these songs that almost feels like the band is having a fond laugh about when they used to do this all the time. Indeed, they sound most engaged on Mosquito when theyre somewhere between its extremes. The lead track, "Sacrilege," showcases their way with a slow-building epic and plays like a more daring kissing cousin of Madonnas "Like a Prayer" as O sings "Fallin for a guy/Who fell down from the sky" as a gospel choir rises up to meet her -- a risky move, since adding it to rock songs can be transcendent but more often than not just sounds like corny co-opting. Here, it actually works, and the way that the band incorporates dub elements on "Under the Earth" and the excellent "Slave" -- which sounds like Siouxsie and the Banshees recording at Studio One -- and the cameo from Dr. Octagon on "Buried Alive" are nearly as impressive. Something of a grower, Mosquito has perhaps the widest range of sounds and moods the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have ever presented on one set of songs. It might not be as cohesive as their best albums, but the standout songs rival their finest moments.

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