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Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings
Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings
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Artist: Counting Crows
Label: Geffen
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $5.97
You Save: $8.01 (57%)
Buy New/Used from $5.12

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(119 reviews)
Sales Rank: 546

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.1

MPN: 001021202
UPC: 602517499850
EAN: 0602517499850
ASIN: B000WMGDD4

Release Date: March 25, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 21-25 of 119
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2 out of 5 stars A Bloddy Mess   May 23, 2008
  2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I love the CC so it pains my heart to write this . . . . this is the worst album i have heard in awhile. It's like they didn't even try. There are 3 average songs (L.A,Sundays, Hanging Tree) and the rest is horrible. In the past, the CC performed the best slow songs, but I was so disappointed in Adam on this album. The slow songs are sloppy. The melodies and notes are all over the place. Honestly, it sounds like something a high school kid would write for their a school project. Adam, please stay in the studio longer next time. If not, call it quits for those of us who want you to go out on top.


4 out of 5 stars Weak on concept, but who cares -- the songs are strong   May 15, 2008
  0 out of 2 found this review helpful

So the concept supposedly was the raucous behavior of the Saturday night (the night before) and then the melancholy Sunday morning after. It has a bit of a feel to that, but it turned out to not just be half up-tempo songs and half down-tempo. Instead, the Crows keep things moving along on this album. Even though I've read a good number of mediocre reviews, I decided to give this one a chance. I thought this might be the first Crows album I didn't buy.

After giving it a chance, I really came to appreciate what it was about. There is actually a small amount of filler on here and while there's no true "classic" song on here that jumps out, there's a nice consistency across all the songs that makes the album worthwhile. The first two songs are the most driving in terms of tempo. Both have a fervor that reminds me of some of the more passionate stuff from Recovering the Satellites, especially Angels of the Silences off of that album.

Hanging Tree is the second song on this album and possibly the best up-tempo song. It's one of the better Crows songs ever and the lyrics are really good. Insignificant is a really get-up-and-go song, although I must say that they copped a bit from Have You Seen Me Lately, also off of Recovering the Satellites. Cowboys was the only dud from the first half of the album, perhaps just a little too long for my taste.

The ballads such as Washington Square and On Almost Any Sunday Morning are top-notch, with the latter the best song on the album. It's actually a bit of a rare structure for a band like Counting Crows as is doesn't really have an identifiable chorus. Later on, Le Ballet D'Or was one I had seen singled out as a low point on the album yet I found it kind of catchy and not deserving of the poor reviews I have read of it. On a Tuesday in Amsterdam Long Ago is just dreary, however, and is the low point of the "Sunday" songs but redemption is around the corner with the final song, Come Around, an upbeat way to end the album.




3 out of 5 stars Good, but...   May 12, 2008
  0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Good enough, but nothing special...I was hoping for more "feeling" in the tracks. Still, all in all, not a bad listen.


4 out of 5 stars multi-faceted   May 11, 2008
  1 out of 2 found this review helpful

a vibrant sonic wonderland that features strong songwriting and powerful energy from a band that has taken years to develop their magical formula on the stage. This one evokes vivid images of the multiple lives of Adam, and gang, while we as listeners are able to correlate the songs to our own lives. The music proves stimulating, motivating and ultimately cathartic in the sinuous creative struggle that this fantastic band has nearly perfected.

This work is substantial and fulfilling.



3 out of 5 stars Disappointing return of Counting Crows   May 10, 2008
  3 out of 8 found this review helpful

You can say many things about Adam Duritz and his band Counting Crows, but one thing we can say for sure is that they never rush things and take their time in between studio albums. Indeed, this album is only the 4th studio album since the 1993 debut smash album "August and Everything After", and it's been 6 years since the previous album, the surprisingly strong "Hard Candy".

"Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings" (14 tracks; 60 min.) brings 2 mini-sets onto one album: the more forceful and urgent Saturday-themed tracks 1 through 6; and the more pensive and quiet Sunday-themed tracks 7 thought 14. I have several issues with this album: (i) there is no stand-out attention-grabbing song on here: where is the "Hanginaround" or "American Girls" of this album? I can't find one; (ii) several of the songs are overly wordy (see, for example, "Cowboys" and "Le Ballet d'Or"); (iii) the mellow second half of the album goes on way too long; cutting out a couple of songs would have improved the flow of the album greatly; and (iv) last but certainly not least, I am sick and tired hearing Duritz tells us how hard and difficult his life truly is (actually: still is, as he's been writing about this for the last 10 years now), give it a break already!

In all, I was quite disappointed with "Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings", which is not nearly as strong as "Hard Candy" was. I saw Counting Crows again in concert last summer, and live they remain a very solid act. While they are coming back to this area later this summer, I doubt that I will go again, as I simply don't find most of the "Saturday/Sunday" songs all that compelling.



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