![Currents [VINYL]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fm.media-amazon.com%2Fimages%2FI%2F91mp9eEux-L.jpg&w=3840&q=75)

Global sensation Tame Impala have announced their highly anticipated third studio album. The 13 track album, Currents was written, recorded, produced and mixed by Kevin Parker in Fremantle, West Australia. Lyrically the record finds Parker in a very different place in 2015 to where he was seven years ago. Transitions in life, relationships, perspectives, mindsets - Currents maps Parker's evolution through these and finds him a brand new person. Musically, Currents sounds like the work of a player on top of his game and having a blast, Parker indulging his whims and unafraid to dive down the rabbit hole after an idea. Again operating as a one man studio band, Parker's resultant record calls to mind contemporary hip hop production, Thriller, fried 70s funk, the irreverent playground Daft Punk presented on Discovery, swathes of future pop and emotional 80s balladry, all filtered through a thoroughly modern psychedelic third eye. A genre-bending soundscape fuelled equally by curiosity as it is consciousness; it's an exhilarating new territory for Tame Impala. Review: Incredible album, perfect on vinyl - Currents is one of those albums that just feels made for vinyl. The sound is warm, full, and layered in a way that really comes alive through speakers. Every track flows perfectly into the next, and the production quality is brilliant. The pressing itself is clean with no pops or surface noise, and the packaging looks great, vibrant artwork and a sturdy sleeve. If you’re into Tame Impala or just love well produced, psychedelic indie music, this is an essential addition to your collection. Review: great album - One of the best albums of the 21st century. Would definitely recommend





















| ASIN | B00XBWBWL0 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 120 in CDs & Vinyl ( See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl ) 4 in Psychedelic Rock 42 in Vinyl |
| Country of origin | France |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (7,128) |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 4730677 |
| Label | Fiction |
| Manufacturer | Fiction |
| Number of discs | 2 |
| Product Dimensions | 31.39 x 31.19 x 1.19 cm; 235.87 g |
C**S
Incredible album, perfect on vinyl
Currents is one of those albums that just feels made for vinyl. The sound is warm, full, and layered in a way that really comes alive through speakers. Every track flows perfectly into the next, and the production quality is brilliant. The pressing itself is clean with no pops or surface noise, and the packaging looks great, vibrant artwork and a sturdy sleeve. If you’re into Tame Impala or just love well produced, psychedelic indie music, this is an essential addition to your collection.
H**N
great album
One of the best albums of the 21st century. Would definitely recommend
C**D
Brilliant
Delivered in perfect condition and great album highly recommend
H**Y
Vinyl
The vinyl received in great conditions. Both vinyls works perfectly.
M**E
I'm A Big Fan!
I don't buy many CDs nowadays as I often only like a few tracks and the rest seem like filler. However I bought this because I love it all. One of the most exciting groups nowadays especially live. People of all ages like them (my generation remembers psychedelia the first time round)! With his John Lennon style voice, no wonder Kevin Parker appeals to a wide age group. There are some gems on this album: The Moment, Yes I'm Changing, Eventually, New Person, Same Old Mistakes (Rihanna covered this one). I first caught onto this group after hearing Let It Happen and hadn't felt so excited about a song for a very long time. Great video too. I've since listened to the other two Tame Impala albums and like those too but I think this is the best and probably the most commercial (but in a good way). Give it a listen, I doubt you'll be disappointed. I was suitably impressed with their 2016 Glastonbury appearance - exciting performance, confetti, lights and a rainbow thrown in for good measure!
H**T
Review of the VINYL version
Review of the VINYL version. I shouldn't quibble as I'm really delighted with this double LP and its lovely artwork for only £8.64 delivered to my house, (thank you Amazon), but I must sound a warning about any promise of better sound quality. Given that many will pay a premium £20+ for the vinyl version, I can't recommend it to them at those prices. Unlike most vinyl on my system, this has very little of that extra "openness" and sounds only a little better than the MP3 streaming I listened to first on PRIME. The CD version is surely more convenient. So fine electronic music, but maybe not the best format... unless you really like the bigger artwork...
J**E
Vinyl
Arrived in excellent condition
M**.
Now to check out their back catalogue......
A real grower. This is my first indulgence of TI and i have to say that they are unadulterated brilliance. Originally saw them on Jules Holland and i ended up looking on youtube for more of their awesome musical narcotic. I bought the album, loved the same tracks that i heard on Jules Holland and wasn't too bothered by the rest. Now i love all the other songs as well which i think shows the quality throughout and is a sign of a great album (lost count how many times i have bought an album to only ever enjoy 2 or 3 tracks and be disappointed with the rest) I am definitely a big fan now and so far not getting bored despite multiple plays over the last 2 months.
A**ー
いつまでも聴いていたい。この音に包まれている快感。ケヴィンの天才に感謝。
M**O
Perfetto, arrivato in un giorno e senza danni.
C**N
Très jolie album et groupe australien, un très beaux cadeaux de Noël pour les amateurs de disques vinyles et passionnés de musique
J**R
Okay, so I've listened to Tame Impala's excellent new album Currents several times now. Like everyday, twice a day, since last Friday. I can say very confidently that it's a masterpiece. Kevin Parker has finally decided he no longer has to make albums that sound like they're being performed by a crusty crew of long-haired, bearded psych dudes jammin' on a weed and lager high. He's succumbed to the idea -or realization- that he himself is just as much a producer as he is a singer in a rock band. Since the beginning he's recorded Tame Impala records by himself, with the same old equipment, with the same idea in mind which is writing great, catchy pop songs. But he did so in a way where those songs could still be looked at as a band and not just Kevin Parker. Currents marks the point in Mr. Parker's musical career where he gave in to the idea that he's an amazing studio svengali that can manipulate sound and instrument into something that's both retro and futuristic. He needn't worry about creating the illusion of a "band" jammin'. Working with Mark Ronson must've given him the push he needed to fully commit to his studio and songwriting prowess. Sure, a broken heart always helps things along, too. This is his skewered pop epic. Currents is a classic pop record. A classic rock record. It's just a classic. The songs? "Let It Happen" is a nearly 8 minute kinetic, anxiety-soaked, dance track that pulsates urgency and the vibe of "when it happens, let it happen." There seems to be a million things happening in this song, yet it never feels overindulgent. It seems to encapsulate everything about Tame Impala that I've grown to love about them(or him.) "The Moment" could be a b-side from Thriller. I could so completely hear Michael Jackson singing this great track. All the studio trickery with delays, echoes, and ethereal synths are here, but Parker's voice is much more in the center and pulled up for us to hear. It's a much more clear-eyed approach to a Tame Impala tune that we haven't heard before. "Yes I'm Changing" is pretty much an all out ballad. A song about coming to grips with the idea we don't always stay the same. People grow apart and that's that. Parker has tinkered with sentiment before, but here he's embracing it completely. "Eventually" has an "It Feels Like We Only Go Backwards" vibe to it, if you threw in some 80s Genesis on top and coated it with some powdered sugar. One of my absolute favorite tracks is the sublime "The Less I Know The Better". For me, this song epitomizes a childhood of sitting in the backseat of my mom and dad's 1984 Honda Accord and those rides being soundtracked by early 80s FM radio. The electric piano, the wurlitzer, the disco-lite beat, and the falsetto are throwbacks to a time in pop music that is looked back upon as cheesy and processed; yet Parker seems to make it relevant and poignant. This song is about as perfect a pop track as they come. "Disciples" comes in and out of the speakers in less than 2 minutes but it's classic a classic psych rock guitar track. "Cause I'm A Man" is a skewed slow jam. THC-fueled R&B. "Reality In Motion" sounds like something Parker may have penned for Melody Prochet but decided to keep it for himself. "New Person, Same Old Mistakes" feels like a mantra put to stark pop bliss. It's slow, loping drum beat and intricately placed musical easter eggs make for some great headphone listening. Currents does something quite fantastical in that it takes the uncool and makes it cool again. Those cheesy electric piano sounds you heard in Richard Marx songs in the mid-80s? Well they're not cheesy anymore. Kevin Parker takes the uncool and makes it vital. Currents is a pop record from another dimension. A dimension where Kevin Parker co-wrote "Billie Jean" with Michael Jackson and smoked up with Alan Parsons. It's one of the best records of the year.
V**O
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