Product Details
Puzzles Like You

Puzzles Like You
Mojave 3

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Truck Driving Man
  2. Puzzles Like You
  3. Running With Your Eyes Closed
  4. Big Star Baby
  5. Breaking The Ice
  6. Most Days
  7. Ghost Ship Waiting
  8. Kill The Lights
  9. You've Said It Before
  10. To Hold Your Tiny Toes
  11. Just A Boy
  12. Mutineer

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #39262 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-06-19
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .14 pounds

Editorial Reviews

CD Description
Coming three years after the release of 2003's 'Spoon And Rafter', Neil Halstead and Co. regrouped at Halstead's own studios in his Cornish home for album number five. 'Puzzles Like You' sees the band move in a poppier direction while managing to keep the laidback alt-country sound that has graced their previous releases. The single 'Breaking The Ice' is also included.


Customer Reviews

A Band For All Seasons!5
The Mojaves have pulled out a real summer treat of an album here!
This is certainly their most catchy, hooky and up-beat LP to date.
It complements the other more melancholic albums in their back catalogue beautifully.
Definitely one for the Mojave 3 collection!

Good music - Horrible Sound4
I've been a fan of Mojave 3 since their first album 'Ask Me Tomorrow' and I very much like their rather 'laid-back' sound. I must admit to being disappointed with the last album and was a little hesitant about buying this one - but overall I'm glad I did.

This is a (relatively) up tempo offering - really quite uplifting overall, and although it looses its way about half way through, it picks up again towards the end. My only real gripe is the sound - which is normally pretty good and understated on their CDs. Most of the songs here are really compressed and limited - I'm not sure why they've done this - the louder the music gets, the more restricted and small it sounds. It seems that everyone wants 'loud' CDs that sound impressive for a few minutes then became rather fatiguing to listen to for more than a few tracks -which is a real shame. I'm giving 4 stars for the songs alone and not the production.

OK? OK.3
As many a pop story will tell, most bands tire of themselves eventually, leading either to split or reinvention. Four albums in, Puzzles Like You sees Mojave 3 picking the latter route, and with it twelve years of widescreen alt-country elegy is replaced by a snappy Byrdsian jangle.

Unfortunately most of this new "fun" direction feels a touch dishonest. While the title track is a golden piece of songwriting, Neil Halstead's tired, breathy voice still belongs to the beautifully mournful Mojave 3 of old, and hearing it over relentlessly happy chimes is akin to a long-term depressive insisting that he's fine really.

The initial persistence of cheer extends only to the opening four tracks, and it's only when they revert to previous form for Most Days and Big Star Baby, that Halstead really reminds us how great a songwriter he is. This pair do not simply stand out due to familiarity though: they are simply better-crafted songs, infinitely more tender, subtle and memorable than those which surround it.

There then follows a slew of songs which are competent but little more. Kill The Lights is let down by Halstead's newly unmasked mockney singing voice, whilst To Hold Your Tiny Toes and Just A Boy simply sound ungainly, like a middle-aged man on a Harley-Davidson, trying new tricks which old dogs can't quite master.

Mojave 3's new songwriting tack does not contain the same coming-of-age confidence seen in Belle & Sebastian's recent transformation, but neither is it convincing as a complete change of direction. Instead it sounds like a band who are simply a little bored. They say that the worst thing you can ask to a long-term depressive is whether they're alright. However, "alright" is just about all Puzzles Like You amounts to.