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All We Grow

All We Grow
AllWeGrow.jpeg
Studio album by S. Carey
Released August 24, 2010
Recorded 2008 - 2010
Genre
Length 43:54
Label Jagjaguwar
Producer S. Carey
S. Carey chronology
All We Grow
(2010)
Hoyas
(2012)
Singles from All We Grow
  1. "In the Dirt"
    Released: July 23, 2010
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
The Independent 4/5 stars
musicOMH 4.5/5 stars
Pitchfork Media 7.5/10 stars
PopMatters 6/10 stars
Slant Magazine 4/5 stars
AllMusic 3.5/5 stars

All We Grow is the debut album of S. Carey. The album was recorded over a period of two years at Carey's home and at Justin Vernon's studio during breaks from touring with Bon Iver. Carey has cited Justin Vernon, Megafaun, Bowerbirds, A.A. Bondy, Collections of Colonies of Bees, Feist, and Sigur Rós as some of his major inspirations for All We Grow.

The album was well received by both audiences and critics, and currently holds a rating of 73 out of 100 on Metacritic.

Carey, who graduated from University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire with a performance degree in classical percussion, makes use of myriad instruments in this album. Alongside the drums, guitar, and piano, one can hear oboe, timpani, viola, xylophone, upright bass, flute, and saxophone.

The AllMusic review by Ned Raggett awarded the album 3.5 stars stating "If anything, All We Grow further suggests an Upper Midwest of the mind, with the Wisconsin-based Carey creating pieces like "Move" and "In the Dirt" that aren't so much songs as ambient meditation as they are songs as quietly dramatic atmospherics -- one almost wants to imagine the album being the sonic setting for a movie or a short story with fresh snow against a slate-gray sky. Meanwhile, the hints of the obsessive minimalism drawing on his educational background can readily be heard in the brisk, immediate piano parts of "We Fell" and "In the Stream," where the rhythms are provided by keys rather than drums (themselves notable for their near complete absence from the album, though the percussive touches on "Action" add much to the song's building conclusion)... It's also nice to hear vocals like Carey's, which gently suggest a Brian Wilson sense of harmonizing instead of fully pushing the point -- refreshing given so many of Carey's compatriots in indie-leaning rock music. ".


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