UPC: 810599020736
Format: CD
Release Date: Jan 01, 2015
Regular price
$20.95 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$20.95 USD
Unit price
per
Couldn't load pickup availability
FREE SHIPPING
This item is expected to ship between 2 and 5 business days after order placement.
![Wilder Mind [Bonus Tracks] [Deluxe] cover art](http://www.moviemars.com/cdn/shop/files/51e575a0494e04cde2f9fa11d6f4e915.jpg?v=1762102835&width=1445)
Personnel: Tom Hobden (violin); Benjamin Lanz, Dave Nelson (trombone); James Ford (keyboards, drums, percussion); Aaron Dessner, Doveman (keyboards).
Audio Mixers: Tony Lake; Robert Orton.
Recording information: Air Studios, London; Ditmas, Brooklyn; Eastcote Studios, London.
Photographers: Ted Dwane; Ross Stirling; Ty Johnson.
Arranger: Mumford & Sons.
Who could blame Mumford & Sons for running away from their signature banjo stomp? Come 2015, when Wilder Mind saw spring release, so many bands had copped their big-footed folk jamboree that Mumford & Sons could feel the straitjacket constricting, so it's not a surprise that the group decided to try on something new. Without their old-timey affectations, they wind up sounding like handsome AAA rockers with a debt to U2, a group that masters sound over song. They do swing for arena-filling hooks and connect -- the quietly escalating "Believe," the incessant surge of "The Wolf," "Ditmas," which is the only song here that would scale to bare-bones acoustic arrangements -- but usually they subsist on a simmer, letting their immaculate, tasteful rock bubble quietly. Often, the persistent, moody murmur recalls a diluted Kings of Leon, a comparison that underscores how Mumford & Sons have made the journey from retro throwback to glistening modern construction. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Audio Mixers: Tony Lake; Robert Orton.
Recording information: Air Studios, London; Ditmas, Brooklyn; Eastcote Studios, London.
Photographers: Ted Dwane; Ross Stirling; Ty Johnson.
Arranger: Mumford & Sons.
Who could blame Mumford & Sons for running away from their signature banjo stomp? Come 2015, when Wilder Mind saw spring release, so many bands had copped their big-footed folk jamboree that Mumford & Sons could feel the straitjacket constricting, so it's not a surprise that the group decided to try on something new. Without their old-timey affectations, they wind up sounding like handsome AAA rockers with a debt to U2, a group that masters sound over song. They do swing for arena-filling hooks and connect -- the quietly escalating "Believe," the incessant surge of "The Wolf," "Ditmas," which is the only song here that would scale to bare-bones acoustic arrangements -- but usually they subsist on a simmer, letting their immaculate, tasteful rock bubble quietly. Often, the persistent, moody murmur recalls a diluted Kings of Leon, a comparison that underscores how Mumford & Sons have made the journey from retro throwback to glistening modern construction. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Tracks:
1 - Tompkins Square Park
2 - Believe
3 - Wolf
4 - Wilder Mind
5 - Just Smoke
6 - Monster
7 - Snake Eyes
8 - Broad-Shouldered Beasts
9 - Cold Arms
10 - Ditmas
11 - Only Love
12 - Hot Gates
13 - Tompkins Square Park
14 - Believe
15 - Wolf
16 - Snake Eyes
2 - Believe
3 - Wolf
4 - Wilder Mind
5 - Just Smoke
6 - Monster
7 - Snake Eyes
8 - Broad-Shouldered Beasts
9 - Cold Arms
10 - Ditmas
11 - Only Love
12 - Hot Gates
13 - Tompkins Square Park
14 - Believe
15 - Wolf
16 - Snake Eyes