*** Welcome to piglix ***

Home of the Strange

Home of the Strange
Home of the Strange.jpg
Studio album by Young the Giant
Released August 12, 2016 (2016-08-12)
Genre
Length 39:50
Label Fueled by Ramen
Producer Jeff Bhasker, Alex Salibian
Young the Giant chronology
Mind over Matter
(2014)Mind over Matter2014
Home of the Strange
(2016)
Singles from Home of the Strange
  1. "Amerika"
    Released: April 15, 2016
  2. "Something to Believe In"
    Released: May 10, 2016
  3. "Silvertongue"
    Released: September 2016
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 76/100
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars

Home of the Strange is the third studio album by American alternative rock band Young the Giant, released on August 12, 2016.

On April 15, 2016, the band released "Amerika" as an announcement track to the new album. The next song to be released, "Something to Believe In", was released as the first official radio single from the album. On May 16, they announced the Home of the Strange Tour, which is set to start in the West Coast on August 13 and will tour around the US. Three additional tracks, "Titus Was Born", "Jungle Youth" and "Silvertongue", were released the weeks preceding the release of Home of the Strange.

Home of the Strange deals with the band's immigrant history and American identity. Lead singer Sameer Gadhia is a first generation American of Indian heritage. The track "Amerika" was inspired by Franz Kafka's unfinished novel of the same name.

Home of the Strange garnered mostly positive reviews. Entertainment Weekly commented that the band found more substance for the album, "the group ascends from the third-tier trenches that waylaid their early career, dishing out their richest and most varied project to date." The Rolling Stone praised the timing of the album with the heated politics of 2016, "the band's third album comes at a time when hyphenated Americans are reminded daily of their status. The lyrics of Home of the Strange reflect that, taking a stance while yet referencing a complex, ongoing identity crisis." Although, Rolling Stone mentioned the band's "longstanding musical identity crisis". Allmusic commented that the album was their "their funkiest offering to date."


...
Wikipedia

...