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<description>SUMOTorrent RSS Search Feed for "Matt costa unfamiliar faces"</description>
<language>english</language><pubDate>Sun, 06 Dec 2009 07:51:25</pubDate>
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<title>Matt Costa - Unfamiliar Faces  [2008]</title>
<pubDate>Thu, 17 Jan 2008 22:20:04</pubDate>	
<category>Music</category>
<completed>29863</completed>
<description>&lt;br /&gt;
More great music reviews &amp; torrents at www.btbeat.com&lt;br /&gt;
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Unfamiliar Faces marks California-via-Tennessee troubadour Matt Costa's first full commercial release, following a self-titled EP and two further independent albums since 2003. A gifted multi instrumentalist Costa is also an ex-professional skateboarder who turned to music full-time after a serious accident left him laid out for 18 months. A friend of Jack Johnson's, UF is out on Jack's Brushfire label and the two have played together quite a few times, most recently in a BBC Radio session early this year.&lt;br /&gt;
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Strangely enough for a man with an all-American pedigree, Costa's voice sometimes seems to betray a bit of a Liverpool or Manchester twang, especially audible in the choruses of the title track. In fact there's a distinctly British tinge to the whole album, from the Belle and Sebastian infused ''Vienna'' to the Beatles-esque title track ''Familiar Faces'' and first single ''Mr Pitiful''. To his eternal credit though Costa dodges the wilfully meaningless lyrics of swaggering mop-top mini-me's, Oasis, in favour of beautiful 4-4 descending piano, quirky choruses and a dash of well-applied clapping. ''Heart of Stone'' shows Celtic influences crossed with a good dash of mid-phase REM and the album is rounded out by the good-time harmonica and gee-tar of ''Miss Magnolia'', a great song which, if you met it late at night, you might just think was Mungo Jerry's ''In the Summertime''.&lt;br /&gt;
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If it sounds like this is a derivative effort then it's only because the influences are worn the sleeve rather than craftily hidden behind musical rhetoric and, given the standard of those who he has borrowed from, you don't mind being reminded of others while sampling the nicely varied imagination and musicality which is all of Costa's own. &lt;br /&gt;
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- BBC&lt;br /&gt;
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California balladeer (and Jack Johnson protégé) Matt Costa loads Unfamiliar Faces, his second full-length with folk, indie, and psych-rock tunes &amp;mdash; some hits (''Mr. Pitiful''), some misses (''Lilacs''). With a plucky guitar, harmonica, piano, and sun-burnished vocals, Costa knows how to work gospel's euphoric uplift into secular music, though he follows the blueprints of his idol (a ''Hurdy Gurdy Man''-era Donovan) a tad too closely. Thankfully, his old-timey charms don't overwhelm; it's more a reminder that in the Age of iPod, crackly vinyl is still worth cherishing. B+&lt;br /&gt;
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- Entertainment Weekly&lt;br /&gt;
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Artist: Matt Costa&lt;br /&gt;
Album: Unfamiliar Faces&lt;br /&gt;
Date Of Release: 2008&lt;br /&gt;
Genre: AlternaFolk, Singer-Songwriter, Indie Pop&lt;br /&gt;
Bitrate: VBR --alt-preset extreme&lt;br /&gt;
</description>
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