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On Eternal Youth, Future Bible Heroes erase any idea of the band being a side-project and work together as a trio striving for the same artistic goals. In doing so, they may have created their masterpiece.
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BlenderMerritt's lyrics are typically playful, and Claudia Gonson coos them with dreamy detachment. [#9, p.146]
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Its far from the level of a Magnetic Fields release or even The 6ths for that matter and, therefore, wont appeal to casual fans.
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MagnetFully realized tracks such as "Affection" and the peppy "I'm A Vampire" are so fetching that they eclipse the rest of Eternal Youth, which is padded with brief, blippy non-songs and is often top-heavy with (literal) bells and whistles. [#56, p.93]
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Eternal Youth is broad and ambitious. Merritt's singing is missing; his baritone would have added a male perspective, not to mention an added playfulness. But Gonson suffices.
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Eternal Youth feels like more of a lackluster stopgap than equal-footing sidecar for Merritt's songcraft, a frustrating teaser from the Merritt portfolio of aliases.
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What's most shocking is the number of forgettable tracks, something Merritt typically manages to avoid.
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Like many Merritt projects, Eternal Youth contains its share of filler, and might have worked better as an EP than as a proper album. Still, its transcendent moments should win it a place in the hearts of those who once viewed their Cure or Bauhaus shirts as shorthand for a world of pain and alienation.
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UncutRecalls the more amusing moments of Momus and Stereolab. [Nov 2002, p.116]
User score distribution:
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Positive: 2 out of 2
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Mixed: 0 out of 2
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Negative: 0 out of 2
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SaraPJul 7, 2005love it. even the song about killing yourself makes me happy. the end.