Sep 07

deal kent genealogy

deal kent genealogy


The Last Muster: Images of the Revolutionary War Generation


The Last Muster: Images of the Revolutionary War Generation


$21.85


An amazing photographic addition to the history of the early Republic”I wondered if it was possible to use photographic and documentary evidence to re-create the first generation of Americans–those men, women, and children bound together by having lived during the Revolutionary War. . . .While there were many images in public collections or owned by collectors, I knew through my work as a curator…

Deal


Deal


$16.09



Bygone Deal and Walmer (Bygone series)


Bygone Deal and Walmer (Bygone series)


$28.00




The Deal


The Deal


$11.99


The Deal

Deal


Deal


$3.99


Deal

Deal Or No Deal


Deal Or No Deal


$13.99


Deal Or No Deal

The Kent Years


The Kent Years


$10.49


The Kent Years

Sideways (Kent)


Sideways (Kent)


$7.49


Sideways (Kent)

Deal Or No Deal 2


Deal Or No Deal 2


$13.99


Deal Or No Deal 2

Wii Deal Or No Deal


Wii Deal Or No Deal


$16.99


WII DEAL OR NO DEAL

Ds Deal Or No Deal


Ds Deal Or No Deal


$14.99


DS DEAL OR NO DEAL

Kent


Kent


$12.79


Kent’s eponymous debut album sees the Swedish band yearning for an identity of their own and failing to find it. At times echoing either Radiohead, Pavement, the Cure, and maybe even A-ha, vocalist Joakim Berg and band mates struggle to find the right dynamic blend of emotion and aggression. There’s a sense that Kent was just starting to master their instruments during the recording, but that the songwriting was still lagging somewhat behind. The two opening tracks encompass stuttering rock maneuvers, wobbly, crunching guitars, and overall sonic force. “Som Vatten” sounds like Pavement stripped of irony. The album gets into a same-y, amateurish stretch before a relatively powerful conclusion. As on Isola, a later album, Kent sees the band knowing which track to sequence last. “Frank” is built on a pretty, powerful melody, and it sets the tone for the band’s more mature later albums. Before that final track, only “Den Osynlige Mannen” and “Pojken Med Halet i Handen” really amount to anything of interest, with the latter track recalling both New Order and the Cure in its keyboard melody. Kent isn’t a particularly original album, and it’s certainly not the band’s finest hour, but it sets a blueprint for Kent’s later moody masterpieces. ~ Tim DiGravina, Rovi


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