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Fever |  | Artist: Sleepy Sun Label: ATP/Recordings Category: Digital Music Album
Buy New: $8.91 as of 9/8/2010 09:51 CDT details

Seller: Amazon Digital Services, Inc. Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 4829
Genre: alternative-music Media: MP3 Download Running Time: 2540 Minutes
ASIN: B003ELXBR6
Release Date: May 11, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Future classic August 4, 2010 M. J. Willet (Amsterdam) People, whoever repeatedly listens carefully to this album will slowly start to recognize it's genius, not just of the individual and group performances, and the individual tracks, but as an album as well. The sum of these elements is a mesmerizing trip that keeps growing on you with every time you decide to ride that flying carpet again, an overlooked and underestimated diamond of high carat that will stand the test of time hands down. If Sleepy Sun keep progressing the way they are they're on their way to creating some serious milestones for genuine music lovers, of which Fever is a definite example. I listen to so much different music, but it has been very long since I've stumbled across something of this magnitude. Enjoy!
Genuine psychedelic rock with a classic feel June 9, 2010 Charlie Quaker (Normal, IL.) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
San Francisco band deliver a strong second album of brilliant, flowing, carefully orchestrated
psychedelic rock that moves with power & grace from gorgeous neo-folk/blues to soaring guitar/
keyboard rock trips--all topped with some captivating vocal harmonies. Sleepy Sun paint a
weirdly dynamic psychedelic landscape in a desolate sea of guitars that's dark & beautiful with
the occasional noise overload and flourishes of lurid energy, all delivered with emotional grit &
an intimate attention to detail that invites repeated listening. References are Black Mountain,
Loop, Jefferson Airplane, Drones, Comets On Fire, Citay, Dead Meadow.
Certainy not in league with giants June 8, 2010 Robert T. Hill (Charleston, West Virginia United States) 0 out of 20 found this review helpful
A listen to three tracks of this laconic group's "Sleepy Sun" had the same effect on me, I was ready for the sun and sleepy at the same time. To comare them with some of the rock "Giants" of the 60's-70's is just wishful thinking for the most part, of a reviewer long thirsty in a desert of the zero talent decade, with the exception of a few groups like Coldplay, Keane, and maybe Lifehouse.
Fantastic neo-psychedelia. Tripping without chemicals... May 18, 2010 J. M. Arnold (Beaumont, TX) 7 out of 9 found this review helpful
I just learned of this band from the SXSW Ioda sampler Amazon put out last month and I came away impressed. Now that I've bought both "Fever" and their debut "Embrace," I have hope for the future of rock music.
Sandstorm Woman, the 9th and final track on this album is a blistering, soaring, trip inducing epic of rock. I can't recommend it highly enough; it is the highlight of the album. I also love Wild Machines: Very heavy & powerful. But other songs like Rigamaroo, Ooh Boy, & Acid Love, while not fillers, seem to be breathers. Songs that you play to let the audience cool down before blasting off with Desert God or something from Embrace.
If you're a fan of bands like Cream, Iron Butterfly (which I actually don't care for), the Jimi Hendrix Experience, or even Stone Temple Pilots and Nirvana I'm sure you'll be putting Sleepy Sun into heavy rotation.
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