Suburbs, The
General
| Sep 2010
Reviews
Francis D
Reviewed 2010-09-19
Reviewed 2010-09-19
“The Suburbs” Arcade Fire
In this epic-length CD (16 tracks, more than 64 minutes of music), Canadian indie rockers, Arcade Fire, set out to examine the way of life that is often seen in TV sitcoms: living in the suburbs. The result is a piece of work that while lyrically repetitive at times, has received generally favorable reviews and rewards listeners with Arcade Fire’s strong melodies backed by ringing guitars, pounding pianos, strong drum lines, and synthesized strings. Lots of excellent tracks to choose from. No FCCs detected.
— Francis
Recommended: 2, 1, 13, 15, 11, 6
1. (5:15) Bouncy acoustic guitar and player piano in this Grateful Dead-like opener, marked by Win Butler’s falsetto lead vocals. ***
2. (4:16) Ringing guitars and pulsing bass line, driven by a solid backbeat. Lyrics warn of “businessmen [who] drink my blood”. Very strong hook. ****
3. (4:40) Midtempo folk-rock feel with interesting time signature changes like “a record that’s skipping, like a clock that’s ticking”.
4. (3:57) A somewhat ominous sound, with repeated chanting of the title “Rococo”.
5. (2:52) Starts with string flourishes, then driven ahead by an urgent rhythm. Female harmonies on the chorus.
6. (3:12) Is that Bruce Springsteen I hear? Of course not — but he could have written and sung this Bru-u-u-ce-like epic. ***
7. (4:14) “Half Light I” Slow dance. Uplifting melody. Strings everywhere, like a 1950s ballad.
8. (4:27) “Half Light II” Pulsing synthesizer mixed with strings, answering the orchestral feeling of “Half Light I”
9. (4:45) Bell-like guitar and Bruce Springsteen vocals again, building to a highly produced chorus and even more highly produced ending. **
10. (3:51) Driving, Neil Young-like garage-rock. **
11. (3:21) A slower, country-rock flavor to this catchy melody. Female “Da-da-da-da’s) add to the charm of the tune. ***
12. (4:28) Orchestrated triplets, piano and staccato snare drum underscore the high vocal line.
13. (5:01) Starts off with plinking piano. Another strong, hooky melody. ***
14. (2:54) Melancholy feeling in this ballad beautifully sung by Butler. Somewhat reminiscent of “She’s Leaving Home” on the Beatles “Sgt. Peppers”
15. (5:26) Counterpoint to #14, marked by Régine Chassagne’s high, light vocals and playful synth lines. Has a 1980s girl band feel. ***
16. (1:28) Short, orchestrated reprise to opening “Suburbs” track.
In this epic-length CD (16 tracks, more than 64 minutes of music), Canadian indie rockers, Arcade Fire, set out to examine the way of life that is often seen in TV sitcoms: living in the suburbs. The result is a piece of work that while lyrically repetitive at times, has received generally favorable reviews and rewards listeners with Arcade Fire’s strong melodies backed by ringing guitars, pounding pianos, strong drum lines, and synthesized strings. Lots of excellent tracks to choose from. No FCCs detected.
— Francis
Recommended: 2, 1, 13, 15, 11, 6
1. (5:15) Bouncy acoustic guitar and player piano in this Grateful Dead-like opener, marked by Win Butler’s falsetto lead vocals. ***
2. (4:16) Ringing guitars and pulsing bass line, driven by a solid backbeat. Lyrics warn of “businessmen [who] drink my blood”. Very strong hook. ****
3. (4:40) Midtempo folk-rock feel with interesting time signature changes like “a record that’s skipping, like a clock that’s ticking”.
4. (3:57) A somewhat ominous sound, with repeated chanting of the title “Rococo”.
5. (2:52) Starts with string flourishes, then driven ahead by an urgent rhythm. Female harmonies on the chorus.
6. (3:12) Is that Bruce Springsteen I hear? Of course not — but he could have written and sung this Bru-u-u-ce-like epic. ***
7. (4:14) “Half Light I” Slow dance. Uplifting melody. Strings everywhere, like a 1950s ballad.
8. (4:27) “Half Light II” Pulsing synthesizer mixed with strings, answering the orchestral feeling of “Half Light I”
9. (4:45) Bell-like guitar and Bruce Springsteen vocals again, building to a highly produced chorus and even more highly produced ending. **
10. (3:51) Driving, Neil Young-like garage-rock. **
11. (3:21) A slower, country-rock flavor to this catchy melody. Female “Da-da-da-da’s) add to the charm of the tune. ***
12. (4:28) Orchestrated triplets, piano and staccato snare drum underscore the high vocal line.
13. (5:01) Starts off with plinking piano. Another strong, hooky melody. ***
14. (2:54) Melancholy feeling in this ballad beautifully sung by Butler. Somewhat reminiscent of “She’s Leaving Home” on the Beatles “Sgt. Peppers”
15. (5:26) Counterpoint to #14, marked by Régine Chassagne’s high, light vocals and playful synth lines. Has a 1980s girl band feel. ***
16. (1:28) Short, orchestrated reprise to opening “Suburbs” track.
Recent airplay
The Suburbs
KZSU Time Traveler — Sep 05, 2025
The Suburbs
KZSU Time Traveler — Sep 06, 2024
The Suburbs
KZSU Time Traveler — Aug 25, 2023
The Suburbs
Music Is... — May 31, 2023
Ready To Start
KZSU Time Traveler — Mar 11, 2022
The Suburbs
Training Lunch — Oct 21, 2021
Charting
2010-09-26 — 2010-11-28
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Nov 28 | 4 |
| Nov 21 | 2 |
| Nov 14 | 5 |
| Nov 7 | 5 |
| Oct 31 | 5 |
| Oct 24 | 3 |
| Oct 17 | 4 |
| Oct 10 | 6 |
Track listing
| 1. | The Suburbs | ||
| 2. | Ready To Start | ||
| 3. | Modern Man | ||
| 4. | Rococo | ||
| 5. | Empty Room | ||
| 6. | City With No Children | ||
| 7. | Half Light I | ||
| 8. | Half Light Ii (No Celebration) | ||
| 9. | Suburban War | ||
| 10. | Month Of May | ||
| 11. | Wasted Hours | ||
| 12. | Deep Blue | ||
| 13. | We Used To Wait | ||
| 14. | Sprawl I (Flatland) | ||
| 15. | Sprawl Ii (Mountains Beyond Mountains) | ||
| 16. | The Suburbs (Continued) |
