Customer Reviews: Read 11 more reviews...
Great album; fun to listen to April 6, 2008 This was my first Sufjan album after Songs for Christmas. It's got many good cuts on it (although I'm not sure newer Sufjan fans would buy into it quickly), and a few that will make you chuckle (Super Sexy Woman). I loved it and would recommend it.
A good start July 4, 2007 First off, I love Sufjan's work. However, this first album oftentimes does little to indicate the future awesome-ness of Sufjan Stevens' catchy, folksy songs. Some parts drag. Some parts make me cringe. Overall, though, this is a worthy buy for fans of Mr. Stevens' work.
A simple hopefully helpful analogy January 4, 2007 4 out of 8 found this review helpful
Sun is Born is to Sufjan Stevens
as
Steropathic Soul Manure is to Beck
Fans only.
"Sun" shines December 26, 2006 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Sufjan Stevens is an indie legend now, with brilliant album after brilliant album, right up to the recent "Songs for Christmas." But he started with the sparkling indie-rock of "A Sun Came," a colourful collection of his relatively early songs -- it's rougher than his other stuff, but still overflows with talent and beauty.
It opens with the slightly medieval flavour of "We Are What You Say," with a stately flute-and-tambourine melody. Sufjan solemnly announces that "we are a servant/we have a song" and finishing up with the reverant "The Spirit is life/We are what You say," right before the music swirls off into a mad tangle of Renaissance acid-folk.
Things get indie-rockier with the catchy flute-and-guitar of "A Winner Needs a Wand," grimy "Demetrius," and the breathless, ghostly folk tune of "Rake." From there on, Stevens explores a half dozen different styles: fuzzy indiepop, more medievalish folk-rock, sparkling lo-fi stuff, glitchpop, shimmering rock, sweeping synth-folk, a sitar dance tune, and much more.
A lot of artists don't really know what they're doing when they first start out, or what kind of music they'll be most talented at. Given that Sufjan Stevens explores at least a dozen kinds of music in "A Sun Came," all completely different, it's pretty clear that he was exploring the styles.
And for the most part, he's successful -- there are some weird moments, like the awkward Beckesque "Super Sexy Woman," but far more like "Joy! Joy! Joy!", a mad squiggle of blips that rearrange into a shimmering, scratchy little pop tune. The different styles are tied together with Stevens' unique flourishes -- oddball synth, smooth acoustic guitar, and mellow piano, as well as some indie-rock grind, bells, keyboard, sweet flute and some odd scratches.
His lyrics are laced with religous references ("I would serve the Kingdom's will"), but Stevens doesn't make it in-your-face. It's a part of his music, because it's part of him. His songwriting skills are rather immature here (lots of very similar and/or repeated lines), but his beautifully smooth voice is almost enough to compensate.
Sufjan Stevens made a heartfelt, exquisite debut in "A Sun Came," full of shimmering indie-folk-pop and colourful instrumentation. A must-have, right before you get his other albums.
THis ones ok October 29, 2006 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I bought this after his more recent works. This one is more different then those. Having said that its still his beautiful voice so I just left off the songs I really dislike on my ipod.If your a fan you should still check this out.
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