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	<title>new album &#8211; Ro Clausman</title>
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		<title>Freedom At 21</title>
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					<description><![CDATA[&#8222;Gold on the Ceiling&#8220; is a song by American rock band The Black Keys. It is the third track from their seventh studio album El Camino and was released as the record&#8217;s second single on February 25, 2012. The song...]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8222;Gold on the Ceiling&#8220; is a song by American rock band The Black Keys. It is the third track from their seventh studio album El Camino and was released as the record&#8217;s second single on February 25, 2012. The song was certified platinum in Australia and Canada.</p>
<p>Two videos were shot for the song. The first, directed by Reid Long, features footage from the band&#8217;s concerts, as well as candid shots of them on tour.</p>
<p>Will Hermes of Rolling Stone called the song&#8217;s keyboards &#8222;a serrated organ growl backed up with a SWAT team of hand claps&#8220; and cited it as an example of Danger Mouse&#8217;s prowess as a producer and co-writer.</p>
<p>Summarizing the song, Hermes wrote, &#8222;It&#8217;s Sixties bubblegum garage pop writ large, with T. Rex swagger and a guitar freakout that perfectly mirrors the lyrics, a paranoid rant that makes you shiver while you shimmy.&#8220; John Soeder of The Plain Dealer labeled it one of the album&#8217;s finest and said that it sounded like a hybrid of Norman Greenbaum&#8217;s &#8222;Spirit in the Sky&#8220; and Gary Glitter&#8217;s &#8222;Rock and Roll Part 2&#8220;.</p>
<p>Harley Brown of Consequence of Sound called the song &#8222;bombastic, slightly sleazy&#8220; and said that it &#8222;best sums up The Black Keys&#8216; almost unbelievably consistent musicianship and success&#8220;.</p>
<p>Melissa Maerz of Entertainment Weekly said that the song, &#8222;with its swarm-of-bees organs and acid-trip gospel harmonies, could be a lost Nuggets gem&#8220;. Randall Roberts of the Los Angeles Times, writing about the song&#8217;s retro stylings, said that it &#8222;sounds as if it&#8217;s existed forever&#8220;.</p>
<p>Sam Richards of NME said that the song&#8217;s &#8222;brilliantly demented cowboy glam holler&#8230; is boosted by the band&#8217;s new trio of female backing singers wailing for all they&#8217;re worth&#8220;.</p>
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