A Picture of the Three of Us At the Gate to the Garden of Eden
These United States
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| Name | Artist | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Preface (Painless) | These United States | 1:50 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 2 | First Sight | These United States | 3:01 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 3 | Kings & Aces | These United States | 3:05 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 4 | The Business | These United States | 2:57 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 5 | Jenni Anne | These United States | 2:46 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 6 | Diving Boards Pointed At the Sky | These United States | 3:32 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 7 | Burn This Bridge | These United States | 3:22 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 8 | Sun Is Below & Above | These United States | 2:35 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 9 | Remember Dear | These United States | 1:39 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 10 | Slow Crows Over | These United States | 2:59 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 11 | So High So Low So Wide So Long | These United States | 3:08 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 12 | Only the Lonely Devil Knows | These United States | 4:35 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| Total: 12 Songs |
Album Review
So-called Johnny Appleseed descendant Jesse Elliott is stuck in a sometimes pleasant, sometimes obnoxiously pretentious rut on this album whose rather goofy title should scare anyone who wouldn't be interested in the album's equally overdone lyrics. Elliott clearly sees himself as some sort of poetic chronicler of roadside America here, offering up 12 verbose, loungey explorations of American life. But any insights are lost behind a reliance on painfully rhymed clichés and grade-school caliber metaphors. Elliott's got a good voice and strong delivery; both his voice and the processing effects are reminiscent of M. Ward, and that's not a bad thing at all. But Elliott and multi-instrumentalist/producer David Strackany can't match the melodies of Ward. That's fine on atmospheric twinklers like the standouts "Preface: Painless" and "Diving Boards Pointed at the Sky," but most of the album suffers from weak hooks supported by painful alliteration and cringe-worthy imagery. Lines like "I got a big brand new Cadillac of pain" and "toting ten tons of magenta and red, and the gentleman said what the gentleman said" crop up too frequently. One song ends with Elliott calling himself a lonely butcher, and the very next song ends with a line about "the lonely devil." He's talking about the devil being lonely. It's very hard in these post-ironic times to get away with such overreaching, meaninglessly poetic lyrics. And many will perhaps find the line between art and artifice trod upon too heavily. But that doesn't mean Elliott isn't a likable chap. It's just hard to believe in the wordy narrator persona he puts on here. With a better editing pen, fewer desperate rhymes, and certainly less reliance on clichés, there's certainly potential for These United States to make great art. This, though, is the kind of nice, safe album a listener wants to like badly, but whose flaws ultimately leave one fumbling for the skip button on repeat listens.
Recent Customer Reviews
Album Reviewer Is Mistaken
by bugsinamberThe iTunes reviewer here is free to feel however he feels about the melodies, but to say that this album suffers from cringe-worthy imagery is itself "obnoxiously pretentious" (which he accuses the album of being at times). Yes, a song ends with "I, too, am a lonely butcher" but earlier in that song, the singer sings, "I, too, am a lonely butcher trying to carve a little piece out of this whale of a great big future, and still just as high and can't quite get over it, with my heart so low that I can't get under it." First of all, unlike poetry, lyrics can't be read outside the context of the song's melody; if you intend to read lyrics as you would poetry, then you're simply mistaken about what lyrics exist to serve. Secondly, those words (which I only brought up specifically because you attacked them specifically) are neither meaninglessly poetic nor of grade-school caliber; they're certainly not cringe-worthy, and have no trace of desperate rhymes. The reviewer goes on to misquote the Cadillac lyrics (or this is a sincere typo); the correct lyrics is: "I got a big brand new Cadillac of a plan". Then he mockingly says, "He's talking about the devil being lonely". Jesse might've brought up a lonely devil, and he may or may not be talking about *the* devil, but he certainly is not talking *about* the devil being lonely; and even if one were so inclined to (and I'm wrong), we haven't quite yet run out of engaging ways to talk about the devil being lonely, so that mockery seems a little amiss; cliches are annoying, but there's never really a reason to shy away from the worthy idea a cliche intends to communicate. Besides, Jesse's intention seems quite clear and calculated to me, as he brings the words "lonely" and "devil" together only in that last line.
As for the reviewer's musical judgement, I'm really surprised he thinks "Preface" and "Diving Boards" are the standouts. Those are two great songs, but the rest of the album actually shines even stronger: "Kings and Aces" and "Sun Is Below and Above", for example, are stellar songs (I hit the repeat button on pretty much every song).
Anyway, here is a pretty representative but random sample of the lyrics, and it's not anything the reviewer accuses it to be: "Eyeballing the clock as if time passed / Making subtle statements she was afraid to just ask / Was I only looking for a blast? I had to find some Bohemians, and fast."
Breathtaking.
by mredpopoI can not heap enough praise on this album. Best of 2008, no question. I can not even begin to describe what this album sounds like. It's human, just so human. Sounds like open sky and empty streets. Weird images of run down mining towns and urban cityscapes coming together. Just listen to it.
ps. The reviewer who called the lyrics cliched and cringe worthy did not even quote some of the lines right. It's "big brand new cadillac of a plan" not pain. Just sayin'.
Album Review is Totally Ridiculous and Misleading
by Tam G.This album is probably one of the most thoughtful and poetic works of art that I have listened to in the past 5 years. It's impossible to appreciate each song on an individual basis because all the songs work as a cohesive unit to create one amazing musical experience in the shape of an album. Like Smashing Pumpkin's "Melon Collie" or Blonde Redhead's "Misery is a Butterfly"...These United State's album just makes sense. The album review says that Garden of Eden is full of obvious cliches and "desperate rhymes" but I think the album reviewer didn't know how to listen to the album. The lyrics are incredibly intelligent and evoke images that can be listened to over and over. They lack any of the inherent pretensions or lyrical cliches that you might find in a Bright Eyes album. Jesse Elliot's voice is utterly raw and seems to penetrate the core of your spine. I think that this one of the great albums of 2008...and itunes album critics be damned...I think in a few years we'll all be patting ourselves on the back and bragging to people that we were some of the first to buy this album.
Biography
Genre: Indie Rock
Years Active: '00s
Top Albums and Songs by These United States
| Name | Album | Time | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | First Sight | A Picture of the Three of Us At the Gate to the Garden of Eden | 3:01 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 2 | I Want You to Keep Everything | Everything Touches Everything | 4:09 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 3 | Honor Amongst Thieves | Crimes | 4:29 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 4 | West Won | Crimes | 4:02 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
| 5 | So High So Low So Wide So Long | A Picture of the Three of Us At the Gate to the Garden of Eden | 3:08 | $0.99 | View In iTunes |
- $9.99
- Genres: Alternative, Music, Rock, Indie Rock
- Released: Feb 26, 2008
- ℗ 2008 United Interests

