Kites Are Fun [Vinyl]

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Kites Are Fun [Vinyl]
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  1. Vinyl: Release Date 2005-08-09
  2. Publisher: Light in the Attic
  3. Artist: Free Design
  4. Sales Rank in Music: #1057979

Product Review

To this day, The Free Design remain one of the true masters of all things soft-pop-psych! Hailing from New York, The Free Design were a late '60s/early '70s family pop group, releasing seven brilliant albums and influencing countless musicians (Beck, Belle & Sebastian, Cornelius, Stereolab...). Fans of The Beach Boys and The Association take note. Originally released in 1967, this is their debut album (first time on CD in the U.S.), 24-bit remastered with 14 tracks including 2 bonus tracks 'The Proper Ornaments' (mono version) & 'Kites Are Fun' (single version). Includes 16 page color booklet w/liner notes by Cornelius & Michael White. Light In The Attic. 2003.
Title Tracks for Kites Are Fun [Vinyl]

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Carefree, sometimes melancholy, always delightful, May 17, 2007
William Timothy Lukeman - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Kites Are Fun (Audio CD)
Here's a lovely musical treasure from a very specific slice of time, one that was unfairly dismissed as too poppy & lightweight. Yet it holds up far better than many "serious" offerings from the same time, and has since become an inspiration for contemporary indie-fave artists such as Stereolab.

The gorgeous harmonies, the intricate arrangements, the irresistibly catchy songs -- this is the Free Design! From the joyful summer afternoon of the title track, to the lush, soaring chorale of "Stay Another Season," this is pop music at its best. And while much of the music is boppy & upbeat, the lyrics often offer a poignant, thoughtful counterpoint. There's more going on here than initially meets the ear! Like so many songs from this time, there's often a subtle note of melancholy running just below the surface of the happiest songs. Loss & shaded memories figure just as strongly as wonder & delight.

It's also fascinating to see how they remake the hit songs of others...Read more


17 of 21 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Kites Are Fun..., October 13, 2004
Kevin S. Schemerholtz (Sunny Oakland, California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Kites Are Fun (Audio CD)
Picture a weird commercial from 1967 - the men wearing turtleneck sweaters, the women with long blonde hair. Perhaps the ad is set in a ski lodge. The sun is impossibly bright, the music impossibly sweat and pure. Around the fire, their eyes would glow as they smiled with perfect teeth. This is a memory that is on the verge of disappearing - or perhaps, for you, it's what Clark Ashton Smith called "the nostalgia of the unknown."

The Free Design opens the gates into this long-ago time - now as dead to us as ancient Rome. Will you go there and greet the men and women at that ski lodge? Why not? It's the perfect soundtrack to a half-remembered dream, or an evocation for a vanished world.


5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Uneven sounding CD . What was used for the source tapes ?, July 20, 2007
Edward Brydalski (Buffalo New York) - See all my reviews
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Kites Are Fun (Audio CD)
5 stars for putting this out
2 stars for uneven sound quality
Some songs sound very good. Project 3 stereo and all.
Some sound like an MP3. Different sources? Damaged masters?
Some use noise reduction (computer based)to a fault.
The hiss sounds better than the noise reduction.
The act of calibrating an analog studio tape reproducer is becoming a lost art.
The original vinyl sounds BETTER. This is a sorry statement.
Project 3 supposedly cut their master acetates from the first generation tapes.
I can't explain why this CD sounds the way it does.
I'd have to talk to the remastering engineer.
Mike Brydalski Buffalo New York
Remember Lana Clarkson; she cant defend herself

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