The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Barnes and Noble

Loading Inventory...
Good Mood Fool

Good Mood Fool in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $15.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Good Mood Fool

Good Mood Fool in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $15.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
After spending most of his career in music making gentle indie folk under his own name and slightly weird indie rock with his band
Here We Go Magic
,
Luke Temple
takes a total left-turn on his fourth album,
Good Mood Fool
. Recorded at a cabin in upstate New York with help from
Mike Johnson
on drums and
Eliot Krimsky
on synths, the album casts
Temple
as a crooner who hovers somewhere between
Steely Dan
and
Billy Ocean
on the smoothness vs. soul spectrum. The music the trio crafts is sophisticated and funky in a plastic, soft rock kind of way. On top of chunky beats, fat synth basslines, and shimmery keyboards,
's gliding falsetto swoops and stings as he leads the way through tales of love and late nights. It's a stunning reinvention and everything
tries here works out just right. He turns out to have a real knack for writing these kind of sophisticated and strange songs, and his voice is perfect for them, too. The album alternates between slowed-down ballads that let him stretch his vocals into the realm of quiet storm serenading, midtempo grooves that will get hips moving and temperatures rising, and uptempo tunes that have some really nice machine-made new wave bounce. The best of the bunch, like the gently bubbling, music-biz referencing "Those Kids," or the island-tinged ballad "Terrified Witness'," are both instantly familiar and just weird enough to sound inventive. In fact, that's a trick the whole album is able to manage as
proves to be expert at conjuring up the past, then twisting it to his own devices.
is very good at indie rock, and his indie folk was always pleasant, but he seems to have found his true niche on
, and it's his first album to carve out territory that is unique and truly interesting. ~ Tim Sendra
After spending most of his career in music making gentle indie folk under his own name and slightly weird indie rock with his band
Here We Go Magic
,
Luke Temple
takes a total left-turn on his fourth album,
Good Mood Fool
. Recorded at a cabin in upstate New York with help from
Mike Johnson
on drums and
Eliot Krimsky
on synths, the album casts
Temple
as a crooner who hovers somewhere between
Steely Dan
and
Billy Ocean
on the smoothness vs. soul spectrum. The music the trio crafts is sophisticated and funky in a plastic, soft rock kind of way. On top of chunky beats, fat synth basslines, and shimmery keyboards,
's gliding falsetto swoops and stings as he leads the way through tales of love and late nights. It's a stunning reinvention and everything
tries here works out just right. He turns out to have a real knack for writing these kind of sophisticated and strange songs, and his voice is perfect for them, too. The album alternates between slowed-down ballads that let him stretch his vocals into the realm of quiet storm serenading, midtempo grooves that will get hips moving and temperatures rising, and uptempo tunes that have some really nice machine-made new wave bounce. The best of the bunch, like the gently bubbling, music-biz referencing "Those Kids," or the island-tinged ballad "Terrified Witness'," are both instantly familiar and just weird enough to sound inventive. In fact, that's a trick the whole album is able to manage as
proves to be expert at conjuring up the past, then twisting it to his own devices.
is very good at indie rock, and his indie folk was always pleasant, but he seems to have found his true niche on
, and it's his first album to carve out territory that is unique and truly interesting. ~ Tim Sendra

Find at Mall of America® in Bloomington, MN

Visit at Mall of America® in Bloomington, MN
Powered by Adeptmind