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The American Adventure (album)

The American Adventure
Electric soft parade the american adventure - album cover.jpg
Studio album by The Electric Soft Parade
Released October 13, 2003
Recorded September 2002–May 2003 at
The Metway, Kemptown
811 Studios, Cowfold
Abbey Road, London
Genre Indie rock
Length 36:20
Label BMG
Producer Alex White, Thomas White, Danton Supple
The Electric Soft Parade chronology
Holes in the Wall
(2002)
The American Adventure
(2003)
The Human Body EP
(2005)
Singles from The American Adventure
  1. "Things I've Done Before"
    Released: September 15, 2003
  2. "Lose Yr Frown"
    Released: November 3, 2003
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic (Positive)
BBC Music (Positive)
NME 9/10 stars
RTÉ 2/5 stars
Stylus C−
The Guardian 4/5 stars
Yahoo! Music 7/10 stars

The American Adventure is the second album by UK prog-pop duo The Electric Soft Parade, released in 2003 on BMG UK & Ireland. The album was seen as a departure from their previous effort Holes in the Wall (DB Records, 2002) and paved the way for their third full-length LP, No Need To Be Down-Hearted.

The American Adventure received mixed reviews upon release. Jack Rabid of Allmusic noted a distinct change of sound from that of the band's debut album, Holes In The Wall, but it was a change that he felt worked to good effect; "They abandon any semblance of their first LP's clockwork consistency for a bumpy ride of an LP that shifts gears from song to song, or mid-song abruptly but successfully throughout". He went on to draw comparisons with the baroque music of The Beach Boys and "'70s Pink Floyd comfortable numbness". Andrew McGregor writing for the BBC praised the uniqueness of The Electric Soft Parade sound, but found fault with the album's lyrical content; "there's surely no need to adopt their 'stating-the-bleeding-obvious in a Moon/June/Balloon stylee' approach. "Existing is easy, living is hard" from the otherwise fine closing track "Exist" is a cliche too far, with unfortunate echoes of "Why" by Annie Lennox." In her review for RTÉ, Anne-Louise Foley labelled the album "dull", stating that it is "nowhere as interesting as it thinks it is" and singling out "The American Adventure" as the main offender in her 2-star review; "[t]he White brothers shoot themselves in the foot with the overblown prog monstrosity that is the title track. Long and meandering (though it does manage to escape from the sound swamp near the end), it's the kind of song that only a mother or devout PR man could love." Despite her reservations about the album as a whole, she found merit in the LP's second single, "Lose Yr Frown", declaring it "the best thing on offer, with a catchy chorus that trips off Alex's guitar with an upbeat ease. It's what the young band do best and they should remember this".Stylus Magazine's Kilian Murphy thought that The American Adventure was despondently disappointing overall, citing "time spent on the road plugging their debut long-player" as the overriding factor which had "caused the Parade to lose some of their fizz", but he also felt that the album also had its good points, too; "Thankfully, not everything on the American Adventure suffers from such despondency. Opening track “Things I’ve Done Before” may not let much lyrical light in (...), but it’s equipped with a killer riff and a sense of momentum that is lost later in the album (...) while “Bruxellisation” is a rich, heartbreaking ballad in the Doves mould." Caroline Sullivan of The Guardian declared the album musically "adventurous" in her complimentary review, and, although the songwriting lacked uniformity, the album was a success;


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