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Yeasayer Lets Fans Name Price for New Live Album

YOU DECIDE WHAT TO PAY


Yeasayer

To celebrate the close of 2010, Yeasayer are offering fans a recording of a live show from Oct. 28, 2010 at Ancienne
Belgique in Brussels. The band is letting fans decide the price they pay for the download. As the band explained on
their Facebook page, “We didn’t want to put
a
value on the live album, so it’s up to you to decide what works best for you.”

Click here to download the album at whatever price you
want to
pay.

Yeasayer
Tour Dates

::
Yeasayer News
::
Yeasayer
Concert
Reviews


Next Big Nashville: Yeasayer, Wavves, Javelin

BRIGHTEST MINDS IN MUSIC & TECHNOLOGY WILL CONVERGE ON NASHVILLE SEPTEMBER 29-OCTOBER
2

Next Big Nashville and Leadership Music Digital Summit recently joined forces to become
Nashville’s most
progressive music event: combining a four day multi-genre music festival with a two-day digital summit engaging
industry leaders, innovators and instigators in lively conversations and presentations. Rounding out this inspiring
week will be films, parties and special events, all making this a must-attend event.

The initial NBN music lineup:

Yeasayer

Wavves

A Place to Bury Strangers

Casiotone for the Painfully Alone


The Ponys

David Bazan
Javelin

The Hood Internet
Garotas Suecas
Moon Duo
The Mynabirds
Otouto

Peelander-Z

Elf Power

Madi Diaz

Kyle Andrews

Keegan DeWitt
Futurebirds

Andrew Belle
Katie Herzig
Megan McCormick

Kopecky Family Band
The Apache Relay
Mikky Ekko

The Protomen
The Non Commissioned Officers
Roman Candle

The Silver Seas
and more.

Record labels, organizations and brands will also present showcases, VIP events and exclusive after parties.

The Leadership Music Digital Summit continues to position Nashville directly in the epicenter of the evolving music
business by bringing together thought provoking panelists and presenters to discuss what’s working, what’s not and
what’s next. Click here to see a list of this years speakers.

Earlybird festival wristbands and conference/festival VIP badges are available at a significantly reduced price for a
limited time. Get ‘em now! All tickets available via nbnsummit.eventbrite.com.


Yeasayer | 04.03.10 | Washington, D.C.

By: Dan Ettinger

Yeasayer :: 04.03.10 :: 9:30 Club :: Washington, D.C.

Yeasayer by JacktheRipper25/last.fm

On the first show of their U.S. tour, with a sold out crowd roaring in approval, Yeasayer ambled onto the 9:30 Club‘s stage.

Odd Blood, the band’s second studio release, is full of juxtapositions. Uplifting lyrics often accompany creepy, futuristic, dark music, or vice versa. The live setting perfectly showcased these contrasts. Strange piano arpeggios looped over a booming bass on opener “The Children” as lead singer Chris Keating‘s heavily processed voice oozed through the mic. “Children” sounded as if Radiohead‘s “Street Spirit” drank too much Dextromethorphan and was almost too fucked up to function.

The syrupy goodness of “Children” gave way to the bouncy pop of “Rome” and the crowd started to get down, which is quite a rarity in D.C. Even the Dirty Projectors‘ “Stillness is the Move” only elicited slight head nods from a D.C. audience. “I Remember,” a wistful, trippy ode to a former lover, mesmerized the crowd as four white screens behind the band pulsed different colors along with the music, like a psychedelic heartbeat.

“2080″ was a true highlight of the evening and nearly burned down the house, Talking Heads style. “2080″ is a song about being handed your future when you are born and dancing away the tribulations that come along with this predicament. Those who knew the complex lyrics to this apocalyptic, carpe diem tune sang along, and the rest simply yelled in unison with the chorus.

A completely rearranged “Mondegreen” pulsed with a heavy reggaeton beat (seriously). Guitarist Anand Wilder‘s patient, reverb heavy solos shone through intense synths and Keating’s almost-rap-like delivery.

Yeasayer by hilary8706/last.fm

With the majority of the songs coming from Odd Blood, it was fascinating to compare the evolution of the band’s sound against tracks from their debut, All Hour Cymbals (JamBase review). Most of the older songs sounded folksy, with a tinge of Middle Eastern pop. The newer songs were much more driving, catchy and quixotic. Behind “Wait for the Summer’s” lush sitar loops and a key change worthy of a Bar Mitzvah, percussionist Jason Trammell played sixteenth notes on the hi-hats with a shaker in one hand and sleigh bells in the other. This was quite a contrast to Odd Blood‘s dance hit, “O.N.E.,” or the inspirational “Ambling Alp”.

After pausing for a brief encore break, the band finished with the quiet, cascading “Grizelda,” which segued into All Hours‘ percussive opener “Sunrise.” Although they only played for about an hour and 15 minutes, Yeasayer showcased an impressive ability to weld together diverse, incredibly fun influences, creating a futuristic, must-see show. After each song, band members would continue to improvise with various noises and synth settings, perhaps giving the audience a glimpse into the group’s creative process. As the tour continues I imagine these noises will soon bleed into the songs, creating a non-stop dance party.

Providence, Rhode Island natives Javelin opened the show with danceable, electronic tunes and hilarious backing clips (including a 1990′s Shaquille O’Neal rap video).

Yeasayer :: 04.03.10 :: 9:30 Club :: Washington, D.C.
The Children, Rome, Wait for the Summer, I Remember, Tightrope, 2080, Love Me Girl, Mondegreen, O.N.E., Strange Reunions, Madder Red, Ambling Alp

E: Grizelda, Sunrise

Check out JamBase’s recent Yeasayer feature.

Yeasayer Tour Dates :: Yeasayer News :: Yeasayer Concert Reviews

JamBase | Odd
Go See Live Music!


Lollapalooza 2010 Lineup Revealed

Great news for music fans: the lineup for Lollapalooza 2010 was formally announced on Tuesday and the rumors have turned out to not be rumors after all – Lady Gaga, Soundgarden, and Green Day are among the headlines set to rock Chicago’s Grant Park this summer! Other acts expected to hit the stage for the [...]

Yeasayer: “O.N.E.” Video

YEASAYER UNLEASH NEW VIDEO FOR “O.N.E.”

12″ SINGLE W/EXTRAS AVAILABLE APRIL 17 AS RECORD STORE DAY EXCLUSIVE

Yeasayer

Yeasayer have confirmed the release of the second single from Odd Blood (out now on Secretly Canadian). The “O.N.E.” 12″ is available as a Record Store Day exclusive for April 17. The single will feature the original album version as well as a XXXchange remix, the unassembled and starkly endearing demo (exclusive to this release), and instrumental versions of the song.

“O.N.E.” is accompanied by another rather fabulous futuristic video – directed once again by Radical Friend (aka Kirby McClure and Julia Grigorian) who created the mind-melting “Ambling Alp.” The post-apocalyptic setting of L.A.’s surrounding industrial wasteland provided the inspiration needed to helm Yeasayer’s provocative performance. The gameboard is based on actual charts and diagrams that represent the psychological warfare in which these otherworldly club kids engage.

Check out the mp3 for O.N.E. at: scjag.com/mp3/sc/one.mp3

Watch the video here:

For more on Yeasayer check out our recent feature/interview Ambling Towards The Big Time.

Yeasayer Tour Dates :: Yeasayer News :: Yeasayer Concert Reviews


Yeasayer: Stream New Album

Stream Yeasayer’s New Album Odd Blood On MySpace

Yeasayer by Guy Aroch

Yeasayer is currently streaming their upcoming release Odd Blood in its entirety at myspace.com/yeasayer. Set for release on February 9 through Secretly Canadian, this is your chance to preview the album for free. Yeasayer also has a bunch of tour dates, check them out here.

For more on Yeasayer and Odd Blood, check our recent feature/interview Ambling Towards The Big Time.


Yeasayer: Ambling Towards The Big Time

By: Wesley
Hodges

Yeasayer by
Guy Aroch

In the midst of Yeasayer‘s
tour rehearsals, JamBase spoke with guitarist, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Anand Wilder about the
creation of Odd Blood, the band’s expansive
sophomore studio effort, to be released February 9 on the Secretly Canadian imprint. Odd Blood is an
explosive, groundbreaking good time that will rattle the brain and move the body (“keep your feet, feet sliding to
the side, to the side”
), and could inspire some copycat attempts down the road. Although some of the singular
influences like Pink Floyd, Depeche
Mode
, a number of ’80s dance bands, Genesis and MGMT are prevalent, it’s safe to say that you’ve never heard anything quite like Odd
Blood
. The band has worked hard to “combine a lot of different elements to create something that’s original,
something very different [from 2007's All Hour Cymbals], and something that would still be Yeasayer,” as
Wilder told us. From the austerely Battles-esque first track “The Children” to the rousing “Ambling Alp” and on to
“Rome,” Odd Blood runs a new kind of gamut. Inherently pop music at its core, Yeasayer’s new brand of
Adventure Rock or Bizarro Art-Pop (you just gotta make up fresh genre names with these guys) is ground level
innovation that defies expectations and invitingly beckons listeners to join them.

JamBase: Give us an idea of the creative process that led to the new Yeasayer sound and album.

Anand Wilder: A lot of the songs began as demos that we would knock off in a few days off from touring. A good
chunk of these songs came about in 2007 and 2008. Then me, Ira Wolf Tuton [bass] and Chris
Keating
[keyboards, vocals] rented a house up in Woodstock, NY from this guy named Jerry Marotta, who used to drum for Tears for Fears, Peter Gabriel,
Elvis Costello and Paul McCartney. He let us rent his house with all of his music equipment in it. Jerry basically let
us set up our studio in his house with tons of gear and allowed us to use all of his drums, synths, and microphones,
and I think that really contributed to the sound of this record. With this album we really consciously set out to do
something very different from our first record that would still be Yeasayer. We would explore all of our different
interests, and we wanted to accomplish a more direct sounding record with higher vocals and make it a little bit
dancier.

A lot of the record was influenced by performing live the last few years. When the first record came out we didn’t
know how much touring we were gonna do, as we were a completely new band. After a year of touring, we kind of
thought, “What kind of stuff do we wanna create that we’ll be excited about playing live?” So, that kind of shaped
the sound of the album as well. Whereas the last record was very hazy, very psychedelic, we wanted this one to be
electronic, very computer-based – kind of sci-fi – more of a body record than a mind record, while still retaining
some of the headier, trippy kind of vibe.

JamBase: To me, this one still has the heavily psychedelic feel, just in a more unexplored, futuristic
way.

Chris Keating –
Yeasayer

Anand Wilder: Sure, the last one had the nature, communal, hippie kind of vibe that people kind of got and
this one is more of a man/machine, one-ness with technology, and we used computers and music software to their
full potential to create the sound.

The album has more of a humanistic feeling lyrically, whereas musically it’s all future sounding. What events
transpired in your lives to lead to this change?

It was more related with the vision and the crafting of songs. We wanted it to be different-sounding and different
lyrically. The last album tackled the grandiose epic themes of the apocalypse and the future, and on this one we just
said, “Let’s see if we can just write some love songs.” We tried to say the word “love” a lot to make it feel more
personal, to bring it down to Earth. But we still kind of wanted to have that strange, odd Yeasayer juxtaposition, so
if it was a very personal love song we’d make it the most sterile, cold, futuristic, sci-fi sounding thing we could
possibly envision.

Odd Blood has an even more percussive sound than All Hour Cymbals. How were the drum
tracks recorded for the record?

The last album we were very inspired by some really beat-heavy music, but I don’t know if it really showed in the
final product because it was so awash in hazy reverb, and this one we really wanted to pronounce the beat so
instead of layering it, it meant taking away so that something more simplistic would come to the foreground.

The way we recorded some of the drums was to do one hit at a time and kind of compress the hell out of it. We had
a really great engineer working with us up in Woodstock named Steve Revitte [Beastie Boys, J. Mascis]. He
was a really invaluable resource to help us execute some of these beats. Then we came to mix in NYC with Britt
Myer
, we made sure that he focused on making the beat really heavy and bringing out the subs in the bass. He
had a really objective ear and could say, “I don’t know if this sampled drum is moving enough air.” We really needed
to get a high quality recording of live drums, to give it the kind of oomph that some of our demos were lacking. It
was definitely a focal point for this album to make the beat as banging as possible. I hope we succeeded at least on
a few songs.

Genesis is one of the artists that came to mind as an influence when I first heard the new record, especially on
tracks like “Madder Red.” Who else do you have in mind as similar-sounding influences for this record?

Yeah, that kind of sounds like a Genesis-type song. I always thought it was more of a Depeche Mode kind of vibe. I
even was thinking that it sounds like some of the music from the ’90s if like Tracy Chapman was singing over an
industrial beat, or an Oasis song or something. But yeah, we just like to combine a bunch of different styles and if
people say [it] sounds like “nothing they’ve ever heard before” it’ll be a success. We try to combine a lot of different
elements to create something that’s original.

Continue reading for more on Yeasayer…

 


Whereas the last record was very hazy, very psychedelic, we wanted this one to be electronic, very computer-
based – kind of sci-fi – more of a body record than a mind record, while still retaining some of the headier, trippy
kind of vibe.

-Anand Wilder

 

Photo by: Jason Frank Rothenberg

Let’s talk album covers and video motifs. On All Hour Cymbals, the man’s face is completely obscured,
as it is in the video for “Ambling Alp.” On the Odd Blood cover the man’s face is either in the process of
waxing into a human form or waning/melting into a psychedelic mess. Does anyone in the band have an artistic
background? How did this motif come about and how does it connect with the music?

Yeasayer from last.fm

Chris is pretty much artistic director, but this particular video was created by these artists called Radical Friend out in L.A., and they kind of
collaborated with Chris about the conceptual ideas for the video and they executed the whole thing. It was kind of a
combination of some old imagery that Yeasayer has been working with over the past few years. I kind of see it as
the end of the song “Ambling Alp” and as a connection between the last album and this album. The video also serves
as a link between the two. Hopefully the new singles will break some new ground and introduce us to some new
audiences, while probably causing a few people to renounce their love of Yeasayer.

What song that you guys haven’t played out on the road are you most excited to start working out for a live
crowd?

I’m really excited about “Love Me Girl;” I think that will be really fun to play live. We’ve completely rearranged
“Mondegreen,” and done a complete 180 with “Grizelda.” We haven’t tackled “Strange Reunions” yet – that one will
be tough – but “Love Me Girl” is really unlike anything we’ve ever done.

I understand that you guys were recording on a much higher budget for this album than on All Hour
Cymbals
. Did a higher budget provide more access to creating the album you’ve always wanted to create or did
this contribute to the final product in any way?

We recorded the last album in a professional studio for five days, took it home and tinkered with it completely on
our own for about four months while we were working day jobs, and then took it in for mixing and completed that
process in five days. With this one, we had demos which were already in pretty good shape and we worked non-
stop for four months without day jobs, with a lot more equipment and were able to just focus on making the album.
Then we took it to a much more professional mixing studio and were able to spend far more time mixing each track.
We were able to go back and do overdubs and beta mixes. After that it got mastered by a much higher-end
mastering engineer. It was just the freedom to keep working at it excessively until we were happy with it. And then,
as always, you say a couple weeks later, “Well, this could have sounded that way or that way,” but there wasn’t nearly
as much of that as the last album.

What does Odd Blood mean?

Yeasayer by Guy
Aroch

I don’t know if it has a specific, singular meaning. Chris came up with the idea of Odd Blood. He explained it as a
futuristic phrase, as a sort of derogatory slang towards someone, like saying, “He’s an Odd Blood.” I like to think of
it as someone during the time of Singularity when we have little nano-robots cleaning our veins, someone who
maybe has that removed like in Total Recall. Pull that homing device out of your nose and then you become
an Odd Blood. I think it’s kind of a sci-fi term. It also just looked really nice. I like the idea of “blood” being
something organic and natural but it being Odd Blood, not natural blood but something strange.

With this being the biggest headlining tour you guys have done to this point, what can fans expect to see out on
the road?

The shows will be a lot more high-paced and high-action with a lot more dance music, a lot more succinct kind of
songs, and also a lot more long, drawn out dance jams. It’s gonna also be a lot heavier, a lot darker than our last
tours. I also think it will be a lot more exciting than it used to be. It should blow away our previous live shows.

I noticed you guys did a one-off recently at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City. How did that gig turn
out?

It was a weird-sounding venue, but definitely a check off the list of significant New York monuments to play.

I want to ask about the video for “Ambling Alp” [see below] because it looked like such a fun video to make. It’s
a mind-warping display with all the quick cuts, the desert setting, the lone drummer, mirrors, naked people and
melting faces.

I actually wasn’t there for most of the shooting of it. All of the outdoor stuff was extras and other people. We shot
in a studio that used to be Charlie Chaplin’s studio and most recently belonged to Jim Henson. The video was
produced by Daft Art, which is Daft
Punk
‘s production company. It was just a really well organized production and the people that were
working on it were really fun and creative. It was a lot of work, getting covered in Dental Alginate and having to
stand still while they peeled it off. You get a crick in your back because you couldn’t move. I’ve never had an
experience like that ever before. It’s great just to go out to L.A. and shoot a music video. It’s a pretty fun job.

It’s good to see bands still creating interesting music videos as a visual accompaniment to the music. It really
makes great songs come to life. Recently, I’ve noticed a trend with a lot of bands creating these “NSFW” kinds of
videos with Sigur Ros‘ 2008 video for
“Gobbledigook” and the recent Flaming
Lips
production for “Watching the Planets.”

It seems to be the zeitgeist right now. No one gives a shit about making it on MTV and getting past the fences. The
Internet has no censorship and also loves nudity.

Yeasayer tour dates available here.

ODD Blood is available for pre-orders now for both CD and vinyl formats. Order now and you will receive a high-quality download of the album right away. To order got to: www.scdistribution.com.

Yeasayer is also offering a free MP3 of “O.N.E,” from Odd Blood at www.yeasayer.net.

And here’s one from the previous album:

JamBase | Freed Up
Go See Live Music!


Yeasayer: 2010 Tour Dates

YEASAYER TO TOUR IN SUPPORT OF ODD BLOOD

Yeasayer

Yeasayer is pleased to announce a full U.S. tour beginning in April to support their fantastic upcoming full-length, Odd Blood. This follows three U.S. dates in February – a performance at the Natural History Museum in Los Angeles and two already sold old shows in New York City, at Bowery Ballroom and Music Hall of Williamsburg.

Odd Blood will be available February 9 via Secretly Canadian (Mute elsewhere). First brewed in the frosty hills of Woodstock, NY at the Marotta lair, then transferred to the steely sweeps of NYC, Odd Blood took many layers to finalize, but with all things Yeasayer the outcome is spectacular. Filled with the band’s own take on pop pleasures and experimentation, the band has once again carved its own path through that ice cold glacier that is modern pop/rock.


Yeasayer Tour Dates

02/05/10 Fri Natural History Museum of Los Angeles Los Angeles, CA

02/08/10 Mon Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

02/09/10 Tue Music Hall Of Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY

02/16/10 Tue Academy 2 Birmingham, GB

02/17/10 Wed King Tuts Glasgow, GB

02/19/10 Fri The Academy Dublin, IR

02/20/10 Sat Speakeasy Bar Belfast, GB

02/21/10 Sun Academy 3 Manchester, GB

02/22/10 Mon The Faversham Leeds, GB

02/23/10 Tue Heaven London, GB

02/25/10 Thu Thekla Bristol, GB

02/26/10 Fri Audio Brighton, GB

02/28/10 Sun Luxor Koln, GER

03/01/10 Mon Trix Antwerpen, BEL

03/04/10 Thu KB Club Malmo, SE

03/05/10 Fri Debaser Stockholm, SE

03/06/10 Sat Rockerfeller Oslo, NO

03/08/10 Mon Lille Vega Copenhagen, DK

03/09/10 Tue Knust Hamburg, GER

03/10/10 Wed Postbahnhof Berlin, GER

03/11/10 Thu 59 To 1 Munich, GER

03/12/10 Fri Club Zukunft Zurich, SWI

03/13/10 Sat Circolo degli Artisti Rome, IT

03/14/10 Sun Tunnel Milan, IT

03/16/10 Tue Sala Apolo 2 Barcelona, ES

03/17/10 Wed Moby Dick Madrid, ES

03/19/10 Fri Point Ephemere Paris, FRA

03/20/10 Sat The Paradiso Amsterdam, NL

04/03/10 Sat 9:30 Club Washington, DC

04/04/10 Sun Cat’s Cradle Carrboro, NC

04/05/10 Mon Orange Peel Asheville, NC

04/06/10 Tue The Masquerade Atlanta, GA

04/07/10 Wed Hi Tone Memphis, TN

04/08/10 Thu Granada Theater Dallas, TX

04/09/10 Fri House of Blues Houston, TX

04/10/10 Sat The Parish Austin, TX

04/11/10 Sun The Parish Austin, TX

04/14/10 Wed Club Congress Tucson, AZ

04/15/10 Thu Rhythm Room Phoenix, AZ

04/17/10 Sat The Fillmore San Francisco, CA

04/19/10 Mon Wonder Ballroom Portland, OR

04/20/10 Tue Neumos Seattle, WA

04/21/10 Wed Commodore Ballroom Vancouver, BC

04/23/10 Fri In The Venue Salt Lake City, UT

04/24/10 Sat Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

04/25/10 Sun The Waiting Room Omaha, NE

04/26/10 Mon Gargoyle St. Louis, MO

04/27/10 Tue Varsity Theater Minneapolis, MN

04/28/10 Wed Majestic Theatre Madison, WI

04/29/10 Thu Metro Chicago, IL

04/30/10 Fri Grog Shop Cleveland, OH

05/01/10 Sat Lee’s Palace Toronto, ON

05/02/10 Sun La Sala Rossa Montreal, QC

05/03/10 Mon Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA

05/04/10 Tue Webster Hall New York, NY

05/05/10 Wed The Trocadero Philadelphia, PA


Yeasayer Release Free Single

YEASAYER TO RELEASE FIRST NEW SINGLE ON NOV 3, 2009

“AMBLIN ALP” IS NOW AVAILABLE FOR FREE DOWNLOAD

LIMITED VINYL 12″ IN STORES INCLUDES REMIXES FROM MEMORY TAPES AND DJ/RUPTURE

Yeasayer

On November 3, 2009 Yeasayer will reemerge with “Ambling Alp,” the first single off their sophomore record ODD BLOOD (due February 2010 on Secretly Canadian). This will be the first recording since Yeasayer’s contribution of “Tightrope” to the Dark Was The Night benefit compilation and their critically acclaimed debut LP All Hour Cymbals (November 2007). The single will be released digitally and on a limited 12″ vinyl packaged in a space age colored metallic sleeve that will also feature remixes by Memory Tapes and DJ/Rupture.


Recorded and produced by Yeasayer – with engineer Steve Revitte and mixed by Britt Myers – it’s immediately clear with “Ambling Alp” that the band have advanced drastically in their songwriting and studio abilities. With “Ambling Alp” they’ve crafted nothing short of a pop anthem.

A stand out from their recent live sets at Pitchfork Festival, Bonnaroo and supporting Bat For Lashes, Yeasayer will play “Ambling Alp” among other new tracks from ODD BLOOD on there upcoming set at Fun Fun Fun Fest as well as a small handful of north east dates before going underground until the albums release in 2010. Yeasayer tour dates available here.

Get “Ambling Alp” for free download by signing up below:


Yeasayer: Album/Guggenheim Gig

YEASAYER TO RELEASE ODD BLOOD ON FEBRUARY 9, 2010

See Yeasayer Live At The Guggenheim Museum in NYC October 30, 2009

Yeasayer

We are pleased to relay details of the long-awaited second album from New York’s Yeasayer. The album will be titled ODD BLOOD and will be consumable on February 9 2010 on CD/LA/MP3 formats via Secretly Canadian in North America (Mute for ex-N. America).

First brewed in the frosty hills of Woodstock, NY at the Marotta lair, then transferred to the steely sweeps of NYC, ODD BLOOD took many layers to finalize, but with all things Yeasayer the outcome is spectacular. Filled with Yeasayer’s own take on pop pleasures and experimentation, the band has once again carved its own path through that ice cold glacier that is modern pop/rock.

On October 30, 2009, Yeasayer will play the Guggenheim Museum in NYC and on that night the band promises an extravaganza of excitement and yes, more news. Yeasayer will expand its lighting globe set up in the famed Frank Lloyd Wright rotunda to create a more interactive affair. Check yeasayer.net for more info and forthcoming details.

Track Listing

1. The Children

2. Ambling Alp

3. Madder Red

4. I Remember

5. O.N.E.

6. Love Me Girl

7. Rome

8. Strange Reunions

9. Mondegreen

10. Grizelda