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The Hosts

The Hosts

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  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Thunder Boy The Hosts 3:19 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Stripper Girl The Hosts 4:51 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 I Keep Fallin' Down The Hosts 4:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Ode to Missie Caldwell The Hosts 3:44 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Gone The Hosts 4:14 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Buffalo The Hosts 3:31 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Pick Up Your Feet The Hosts 4:38 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Almost Lost My Way The Hosts 3:46 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 So Hard to Let Go The Hosts 3:31 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Seize the Moment The Hosts 4:47 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Warped The Hosts 3:49 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Devil Dog Road The Hosts 4:04 $0.99 View In iTunes

Recent Customer Reviews

Electric Psychedelic Folk Rock from Detroit!
     
by The Paisley Umbrella

In a town whose musical heritage and continuous contribution to rock 'n' roll is always in the forefront, The Hosts offer up a strange compliment to the better known, garage rock type music that The Motor City is better known for. On their debut album, The Hosts present what can best be termed as vintage California folk psychedelia. On the opening track "Thunder Boy", <b>Melissa Host</b> takes a vocal prominence that's coupled with jangling guitars and a few tasteful solos that cannot be anything but played on old guitars; one just feels it. There's also some imagery akin to the beach, although it's hard to describe further. Although I can't say "Stripper Girl" hits close to home, I've heard many stories that I'm sure plenty of you could corraborate on "She bums a smoke and she gets free drinks, but the dope ain't free, and her apartment stinks, all the troubles come double, her psychology comes for free." The song is dense with surf/western style guitar playing that enhance am emotion of solitude, but the often and never pleasant melodic violin(?) screetches lend an abrasiveness that somehow communicates flawed beauty in a way that's not to be taken too seriously.

Although the material on their debut is electric folk and psychedelic, the musical tone carries a bright powerpop feel that's a little less emotionally intense as earlier electric/psych/folk bands like <b>Love</b>, but songs like "I Keep Falling Down" are no less instrumentally engaging. Although "Ode To Missy Caldwell" is an almost uptempo song about a pathetic person. If there's a great dance song that's entirely negative, this is it. In true '60s psychedelic fashion, The Hosts create a political protest song, infuse it with jangly guitar licks, background vocals that sound like Tibetan chants, flutes, and some great guitar effects that sound like bee buzzing just to point out the pathetic truth that certain things currently happening make no practical sense on "Buffalo" to create a great piece that's never overbearing or "hippie" (only in the negative sense). Other tracks on their debut look to an early '70s beat with more <b>CCR</b> influence than <b>Byrds</b> such as "Pick Up Your Feet", but the results are no less powerpop and still carry a retropop feel, although slightly bluesy. They're songs push towards early '70s maintream, singer/songwriter folk rock such as "Almost Lost My Way," "Gone", or the less notable "Seize The Moment". Although the sound is not always derived from earlier sources, there's a pervasive, retro jingle/jangle and occasionally surf guitar throught the songs such as the notable "So Hard To Let Go." There's more hidden potential on the more electric tracks like "Devil Dog Road," a Summer of Love, Haight-Ashbury, blues romp that throws one back to <b>Jefferson Airplane</b> at The Fillmore, complete with a light show and acidic guitar solo.

As participants in "The New Paisley Movement", The Hosts are about a feel to the music and not a type of music other than psychedelic. The musical influences on their debut are broad and thus, have an audience to those with a broader musical outlook, but the songs are mostly really good and there are plenty of hidden gems, tasty psychedelic riffs, vintage Vox 12 strings and Rickenbackers to get you jingle-jangle fix, and a few powerpop beats to boot. Aside from that, the album artwork is an acid trip in and of itself. It's been a long overdue task to bring back acid, loveins, paisley, Nehru jackets, and music that's a little weird but still fun. Although in variable styles and sometimes with variable results, The Hosts have done their part to make swirling, colorful music again. One can only imagine their future possibilities.

Great Music
     
by Chad5150

Great Songs, Great Music.

The Hosts, The Hosts
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