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iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

Young Modern

Silverchair

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Silverchair

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Young Modern Station Silverchair 3:11 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Straight Lines Silverchair 4:17 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 If You Keep Losing Sleep Silverchair 3:20 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Reflections of a Sound Silverchair 4:09 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Those Thieving Birds (Pt. 1)/Strange Behaviour/Those Thieving Birds (Pt. 2) Silverchair 7:25 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 The Man That Knew Too Much Silverchair 4:19 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Waiting All Day Silverchair 4:28 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Mind Reader Silverchair 3:07 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Low Silverchair 3:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Insomnia Silverchair 3:06 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 All Across the World Silverchair 4:01 $0.99 View In iTunes

Album Review

Arguably, each album released by Silverchair has been an improvement on the last, or at least a marked change in direction. It is a natural progression for a band to evolve away from its early influences, and in this instance the world has listened to the boys become men. As major songwriter Daniel Johns' teenage angst turned into youthful enthusiasm and experimentation, there has been a distinct maturity in the band's songwriting and production. Gone are the heavy Sabbath riffs, the lazy adolescent poetry, and Ben Gillies trying to invoke Bonham or Moon. In their place are catchy melodic hooks, inspired lyrical themes, and stunning string arrangements. This album is the pinnacle of the band's fascinating development. Titled after Van Dyke Parks' nickname for Johns during their time together working on 2002's Diorama, Young Modern is a highly ambitious work that happily jumps from glam rock to sweeping orchestral pastiches and almost everywhere in between. Once the opening sonic aural frenzy of "Young Modern Station" effortlessly segues into the instant rock classic (and Aussie number one hit) "Straight Lines," there is an overwhelming feeling that all bets are off — there has never been a Silverchair album like this. Diorama and 1998's Neon Ballroom offered a few musical surprises, but ultimately strayed into the familiar grunge-tinged formula that heavily peppered the band's first two long-players. You can hear in Johns' vocal performances a playfulness and energy that never dared show itself in previous works. There can be no doubt that his eclectic 2004 side project release with renowned DJ, remixer, and keyboard player Paul Mac as the Dissociatives opened Johns' musical landscapes wide open, and his vocals on this album are versatile enough to fit into each genre jump. Another contributing factor to the change of the band with this album is Julian Hamilton, of the Sydney duo the Presets, who appears on four of the 11 tracks as a co-writer (the last two Silverchair albums were completely written by Johns). Young Modern made history in the Australian music charts by becoming the fifth straight album by an Australian act to debut at the number one spot. Silverchair are also the only Australian act to achieve five number one albums, eclipsing native heavyweights INXS, Midnight Oil, and Cold Chisel.

Recent Customer Reviews

Catchy pop tunes from a seemingly unlikely source
     
by RWseattle

I got to hand it to these guys, they are following their hearts. It takes real guts to do a change-up like this, and I for one am glad they did. The "new" Silverchair is a much richer and complex outfit. There is a nice little blend of XTC, Spacehog, Midnight Oil and Supergrass in their compositions. Awesome REAL string arrangements add to their cred. Next step: an instrumental album!!

What a HUGE letdown
     
by zzzzap

This album was probably THE biggest letdown for me next to Metallica's St. Anger. I loved Frogstomp. I loved how silverchair defined "their" sound more with Freakshow. I loved the experimentation and growth of Neon Ballroom. I loved the culmination of their style/experimentation and uniqueness in Diorama. However, Young Modern is not Silverchair. It sounds more like Daniel Johns deciding that Silverchair would become The Dissociatives. I'm all for a band growing and maturing but completely changing musical direction and calling it the same band is completely different. I don't think it has worked for any band to date. I admire Young Modern as a piece of musical art, but I think it was a complete letdown as a Silverchair album.

gross
     
by 9MusicLOVER9

not that they were any better before. i have lost all respect for this band, after being grunge "copy-cats" now they've turned all radio friendly and popish :P

Biography

Formed: 1992 in Newcastle, Australia

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Silverchair quickly rose to international stardom in 1995 by mining a mix of Nirvana and Pearl Jam on their debut album, Frogstomp. Buoyed by the angst-ridden single "Tomorrow," Frogstomp topped the Australian charts and cracked the Top Ten in America, making Silverchair the first Australian act since...
Full Bio