Give Up
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Average customer review:Product Description
A side project from Death Cab For Cutie frontman Ben Gibbard and Jimmy Tamborello, who formerly played with synth-poppers Figurine but now records as Dntel, the Postal Service creates bedroom electronica with surprising emotional pull on GIVE UP. Ten tracks lyrically convey both a youthful ennui and the nostalgic ache of longing. Tamborello creates a tense sonic space that allows Gibbard's spare yet careful guitar to occasionally chime in and cut the tension.
While Tamborello's sculpted electronics hearken back to the minimalism of early Depeche Mode, Gibbard's expressively fey vocals and emotional sentiments lend a warm, comforting contrast to themachine-age chilliness (as do the occasional backing vocalsfrom Jen Wood and Rilo Kiley's Jenny Lewis). This contrast is best illustrated on "We Will Become Silhouettes", when Gibbard sings "[A]nd we become silhouettes when our bodies finally go", only to be followed by a string of optimistic bleeps that are the sonic equivalent of a miniature sky full of twinkling stars.
Track Listing
- District Sleeps Alone Tonight
- Such Great Heights
- Sleeping In
- Nothing Better
- Recycled Air
- Clark Gable
- We Will Become Silhouettes
- This Place Is A Prison
- Brand New Colony
- Natural Anthem
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #4671 in Music
- Released on: 2003-04-28
- Number of discs: 1
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
In every sense of the word Give Up, the debut album from American Electro beatniks the Postal Service is a remarkable record. Born of a chance meeting between Ben Gibbard, singer of Seattle indie-rockers Death Cab for Cutie and LA resident and Dntel lynch-pin Jimmy Tamborello, and written and recorded by post--hence the name the Postal Service--it's an inspired, if unlikely, marriage of lo-fi innocence and hi-tech beauty. Gibbard's voice is filled with the insecure questioning normally restricted to recently dumped singers in emo bands. Tamborello's clicks, bleeps, analogue murmurs and eerie scraps are the stuff of inaccessible bedroom electronica. Together though, they find a sensual middle ground where stories of jilted lovers and fragile desires softly prick the emotions on a tidal wave of otherworldly synthetic sounds. "The District Sleeps Alone", with its tripping beats, bittersweet computer strings and tragically uplifting hook is melancholy at its most tender. "Sleeping In" is a joyously sunny daydream; a naïve vision of how good the world could be. And everything else falls somewhere between the two--equal parts heartbreak and hope, to form a strange and wonderful dimension where electro-pop has a soul. --Dan Gennoe
Customer Reviews
Postal Service
This is in the top 5 of my favourite albums ever, i love it!
Its been out since 2001 and it sounds as fresh as ever.
Electronic music with real song writting skills!
Ive introduced a lot of friends with varying music tastes to the Postal Service and this album seems to be in most of my friends 'top 5'
Utterly Brilliant, listening to it right now.
A friend introduced me to The Postal Service. Best. Friend. Ever.
It's absolutely amazing, I know this is one more 'WOW' in a litany of great reviews but I really wanted to add mine to it, because it really is deserved.
I just jumped onto amazon to see if they had any other albums out and I'm fairly depressed to find that they don't.
I'll be waiting patiently.
Pure brilliance
If you are in any doubt about buying this album do so now. I have only had it two days and it has been on constantly at home, at work and in my car since I got it. Jimmy Tamborello has excelled himself and the tracks are fantastic. Ben Gibbard's vocals enhance the mood of each track perfectly and his lyrics tell some amazing stories. Every track is fantastic with the album starting off on a bouncy happy footing with the last three tracks showing a darker side of this duo. Such great heights and Clark Gable are stand out tracks for me but really its just a stand out album all the way through.
Buy this album, buy it now!





