
Artist: Avey Tare & Kria Brekkan
Album: Pullhair Rubeye
Label: Paw Tracks
Release date: 24 April 2007
Genre: Rock
Style: Freak Folk
Tracklisting:
01. Sis Around The Sandmill [unreversed]
02. Opis Helpus
03. Foetus No-Man
04. Who Wellses In My Hoff
05. Lay Lay Off, Faselum
06. Palneka
07. Sasong
08. Was Onaip
Total running time: 31' 34"
[Avey Tare & Kria Brekkan - Foetus No-Man - Live @ Philadelphia, PA]
"Music is bloated with tension. There’s the more ubiquitous tension that exists within music’s soundworld, such as crafted harmonic tensions that are "released" in order to drive the musical narrative (like when the chorus hits for the first time or when the instrumental climax is resolved into the main melody). Then there’s the less consciously acknowledged tension between the artist and audience, in which artist intension and audience reception are in a perpetual push and pull. It is in the latter spirit that I approach Avey Tare and Kria Brekkan’s controversial debut release Pullhair Rubeye — controversial because it was recorded "normally" but reversed in its entirety for official release. Yes, the album plays "backwards.” Like the Dada movement in art and literature, in which the cultural, discursive framing of the work was considered as important, if not more important, than the work itself, Pullhair Rubeye evokes a kind of tension that has less to do with the usual semiotic or lyrical quibbles and more to do with how meaning and significance are defined and also denied.
In fact, the tension is so pronounced that the reaction to Pullhair Rubeye is just as interesting as the idea of reversing what would otherwise be a relatively conventional album. With the word pretension slapped on any artist who tip-toes outta their safe musical dungeons, coupled with the lingering “But is it a classic, best of all-time LP?" mentality, Pullhair Rubeye has already met a considerable amount of dissent: It’s weird. It’s unnecessary. Gimmicky. Annoying. Why did they ruin their songs? What happened to the real album? Why couldn’t they just release proper versions? Is this a joke? (All slight permutations of comments I’ve actually read.) I suppose reasonable reactions, but some of the abject dismissals of the album sound as if Avey and Kria desecrated something sacrosanct, something ultimately out of bounds even for the artists who created it. Pullhair Rubeye wasn’t meant to shock or annoy or provoke. As Avey best put it in a message board post: “…that is indeed the record, no tricks involved here, no concepts. We just really like it that way. Hope thats cool. Were not bummed. i hope youre not...”
So, is it spoiled to want to hear the “normal” versions of these songs? I guess that depends on who you’re asking, but I’d be dumbfounded if anyone could resist at least sampling what the album sounds like in its originally recorded version. Somewhat reminiscent of Francisco Lopez’ Buildings [New York], in which the listener is given a choice whether or not to break the seal to the booklet explaining the album’s background philosophy, Avey and Kria have unintentionally presented their fans with a similar choice. Years of cultural conditioning have ensured that we’ll always hear Pullhair Rubeye as "backwards," no matter how many attempts are made to internalize the songs as normal (believe me, I’ve tried), so the choice made by many was predictable: as soon as the album leaked, fans with audio programs reversed the tracks and corrected the pitch/speed on several of them in order to hear Pullhair Rubeye as it was originally recorded. And ka-boom: a multitude of experiences are born — some have only heard the original "reversed" version, some the "corrected" version, some both versions, and some have only read about it all.
And this is where the tension between the artist and audience becomes tangible. It goes beyond the mental work of, say, trying to figure out the artist’s lyrical meaning and into defining what is or isn’t music and how one might go about seeking out “the original.” And I fucking love it. It’s exciting and organic; it’s a needed WRENCH. Like The Resident’s Animal Lover, an album manipulated to mimic the “animal noise mating patterns” of cicadas and frogs, as well as The Flaming Lips’ four-disc musical monster, Zaireeka, Pullhair Rubeye has inadvertently unveiled the stale illusion of commodified music as some sort of exalted fetish object that should be preserved in its "original" state. Even more interesting is that, unlike Buildings, Animal Lover, and Zaireeka, Pullhair Rubeye doesn’t have a conceptual underpinning. Instead, almost as easily as deciding to pan an acoustic guitar to the left, Avey and Kria’s decision to reverse the entire album was a capricious, last-minute choice, a whimsy that has ultimately shaped everyone’s conception and opinion of it. What the final released version of Pullhair Rubeye becomes, then, is a source for exploration, based on your level of access and gumption.
Despite its relatively simplistic, direct approach (which is made apparent when listening to the "corrected" version), I have still yet to completely synthesize Pullhair on a musical level. There’s a lot to take in, especially after hearing both versions. But it’d be a shame not to give the backward version a real chance, just because you have access to the “corrected” version — and I’m not talking about a play or two for kicks. Both versions have their own redeeming qualities, but it takes much longer for the backward tracks to reveal themselves. The structures, patterns, and melodies are jarring until your mind is able and ready to sponge in the sounds. And I can tell you now that the more you hear the “corrected” versions, the harder it will be to want to hear the backward versions (personally, I combine both albums, playing each track’s version back to back).
"Opis Helpus," for example, is among the standout tracks backwards. Its dynamic is completely dislocated such that the ending (which is toward the beginning of the "corrected" version) is the calm after rather than before the storm. Melodic and even singable, the backwards version piques my curiosity more so than the "corrected" one. It was particularly interesting to discover what sounded like an accordion backwards was actually an acoustic guitar forwards (and here I thought I always listened to the actual sound, not just its pitch relations and counterpoint). "Foetus No-Man" is another strong track backwards. With a predictable structure in its corrected (and slowed down) form, it’s easier to get "lost" in the backwards version. The emphasis is on its warmth, not its precision.
"Who Wellses in My Hoff," a track about domesticity, and "Lay Lay Off, Faseiam," which features two oddball melodies over jerky guitars, are striking in both versions. Simple yet far from derivative, both tracks show tremendous growth for Avey’s awkward melodic sensibility. They’re catchy and accessible, albeit through that weird Animal Collective filter. The tensions and releases are subtle and inviting, and they’re not jumping up and down for attention — contemplative without being overly insular. "Sasong" is another exemplary track, but mainly in its "corrected" version. A beautiful song with a radiating depth in its “corrected” form, "Sasong" fails to reach any sort of intrigue in its backwards and sped up version, except for perhaps a fleeting, twinkling sort of textural glee.
Had Avey and Kria released Pullhair Rubeye as it was originally recorded, the most tragic part would be that the mental work involved on the listener’s part would be reduced to simple good/bad judgment and would be appreciated (or not) based on arbitrary distinctions. The fact is: the idea of music as exalted has more to do with commodity fetishism than innate musical divinity. Music’s not waiting to be written. Music’s written. And whatever happens to "it" — whether remixed, sampled, played in a car commercial, used to sell shoes, etc. — is just as significant as the "original" version. With the current musical terrain as bland as it is, why not encourage music like Pullhair Rubeye, especially when it doesn’t have to mask itself in machismo or morbid imagery or atonality or arrhythmicacy? Pullhair Rubeye is significant not because of its aesthetic and non-conceptual disposition, but also for its dedication to instinct and brave novelty (in the best sense of the word). It’s as much a dialog as a document, and the optional process — which again was not intended, but expected — is even more reason to take note. Yeah, yeah, perhaps the idea of reversing songs is "easy" and not very "experimental." But fuck technical proficiency and exclusionary philosophy. This is all about artistic intuition, and it’s this intuition that has opened up our musical conversation into interesting areas." [source]
[Download original reversed version.Download unreversed version.Buy]
Sunday, April 29, 2007
Avey Tare & Kria Brekkan "Pullhair Rubeye"
Posted by
Sonic Process
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Genre: Freak Folk
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Dntel "Dumb Luck"

Artist: Dntel
Album: Dumb Luck
Label: Sub Pop
Release date: 24 April 2007
Genre: Electronic
Style: Ambient Pop/Electro Pop/Glitch
Tracklisting:
01. Dumb Luck
02. To A Fault [Feat. Grizzly Bear]
03. I'd Like To Know [Feat. Lali Puna]
04. Roll On [Feat. Rilo Kiley]
05. The Distance [Feat. Arthur & Yu]
06. Rock My Boat [Feat. Mia Doi Todd]
07. Natural Resources [Feat. Fog]
08. Breakfast In Bed [Feat. Bright Eyes]
09. Dreams [Feat. Mystic Chords Of Memory]
Total running time: 41' 19"
[Dntel - (This Is) The Dream Of Evan And Chan - Video Clip]
[Jimmy Tamborello - Studio Tour]
"Jimmy Tamborello likes to take his time. Thirteen years after starting to work under the Dntel moniker and almost six years after releasing his last Dntel full-length, Life is Full of Possibilities (Plug Research), he has painstakingly built and birthed Dumb Luck, an album five years in the making.
Thick with Tamborello’s signature electronic washes and genius beat placement, Dumb Luck is an album lyrically as much about human distance as connection. With vocal contributions from friends Jenny Lewis (Rilo Kiley), Edward Droste (Grizzly Bear), Valerie Trebeljahr and Markus Acher (Lali Puna), Mia Doi Todd, Grant Olsen and Sonya Westcott (Arthur & Yu), Andrew Broder (Fog), Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes) and Christopher and Jennifer Gunst (Mystic Chords of Memory), the organic instrumentation by Chris Hathwell (drummer, Moving Units) and Paul Larson (guitarist, The Minor Canon) is manipulated, chopped and pasted amidst Tamborello’s skittish beats, house clicks, organ washes and dreamily pixelated symphonies. The result is at once understatedly epic, ethereal and concrete.
Like Mistake Mistake Mistake Mistake (Plug Research), his 2006 release under the name James Figurine, and The Postal Service’s 2003 release Give Up, Tamborello meticulously labored over each element of his bit-crushed compositions in his LA home studio. Fueled by a short attention span, his distaste for working on any one project for extended periods of time meant that this was, like most worthwhile things, a process fraught with redefinition and constant change.
After all, producing, engineering and songwriting initially started out as pre-teen after-school fun for Tamborello, whose early interests were breakdancing music and ‘80s techno pop (and later the sonic tampering of Skinny Puppy and Aphex Twin). In the mid-to-late ‘90s, he played in the post-hardcore band Strictly Ballroom and satisfied his ‘80s techno pop appetite with the (still active) Figurine he also played stints in So-Cal pop groups Further and The Tyde. The myriad of friends Tamborello made along the way informed the collaborative element of Dntel; each vocal is viewed as another instrument in the arsenal, helping to create a warm masterwork that is uniquely his." [source]
[Download.Buy]
Posted by
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19:05
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Genre: Ambient Pop, Electro Pop, Glitch
Monday, April 23, 2007
Pole "Steingarten"

Artist: Pole
Album: Steingarten
Label: ~scape
Release date: 16 March 2007
Genre: Electronic
Style: Dub Techno/Glitch/Ambient
Tracklisting:
01. Warum
02. Winkelstreben
03. Sylvenstein
04. Schöner Land
05. Mädchen
06. Achterbahn
07. Düsseldorf
08. Jungs
09. Pferd
Total running time: 45' 06"
"Living up to one’s legacy as an artist is never an easy prospect, and following his pioneering Pole releases from the late ’90s (1, 2, and 3), Stefan Betke was staring this problem straight between the eyes. The stripped-down, dub-influenced techno he released during that time, alongside like-minded producers from the Basic Channel camp and others, changed the face of electronic music for the following decade—and with no sign of that influence dying down, the change may just be permanent. Which is all well and good for the ego and CV, but where does that leave an artist who has no interest in repeating himself? If his original plan was to break new sonic ground, how could this be achieved without either rehashing things he had already done or totally alienating his strong following?
Fair or not, it’s likely that nothing Betke issues from here on out will make people forget that early output. Betke’s sixth full-length album (and second on his own ~scape imprint) goes a long way toward solving that particular conundrum. After a rather unexpected side trip into hip-hop (including guest appearances from Fat Jon) on his self-titled album from 2003, Betke hasn’t merely licked his wounds and retreated into familiar territory, but fused some lessons learned from his own back catalog to create a shiny new beast, at once identifiable as his work and yet something tangibly different. In a blindfolded test I conducted (with the help of iTunes Party Shuffle function), I named the majority of these tracks as having a Pole-influenced sound, but only once correctly identified a track from this album as Betke’s own work. He hasn’t reinvented the wheel here, but he has pimped his ride a bit, with some fabulous results.
Most of the tracks here are built around short loops, and there are still significant dub and hip-hop influences present, as well as bits of old Pole standbys (noise/clicks/pops as rhythmic tools; deep throbbing bass; languid tempos). But this time out, Betke has mixed things in a different way; it’s still technically “minimal” music, but the layers overlap far more than they did in the past, making for a busier, more melodic landscape of sounds. Everything is richer, more fully realized, and when the bits of melody do float in and out of the mix, they are that much more memorable for having made their way through Betke’s layers. The beats are more varied, from hip-hop and R&B influenced breakbeat-type loops (“Warum,” “Schöner Land”) to funk (“Achterbahn”) to scratching, fuzzed-up Aphexisms (“Mädchen”); the basslines are more melodic, a departure from the heavy dub tracks of yore, more suited to moving asses than inspiring head-nods. When Betke’s trademark crackling, hissing noises appear, they don’t simply hang in the ether and loop themselves for the sake of looping—they’re far more integrated into the grain and structure of the tracks, a building block rather than mere ornamentation. This might not be Betke’s most groundbreaking full-length, nor even the most memorable, but the case can be made that it is his most fully realized.
The cover photo of Schloss Neuschwanstein is an apt visual metaphor for the music found within: ornate, serene, untouched almost to the point of it looking slightly surreal, like it was constructed of Lego as opposed to brick and mortar. It looks bright and inviting, even cozy in places, but is surrounded by desolate, snow-covered mountains, almost too perfect to exist in this reality. The layout is intricate and sprawling, but somehow conveys a sense of simplicity and economy. Just as this castle could easily be a snowblind mirage, Pole’s music exists in its own pocket universe—but one close enough to reality to be easily grasped and related to." [source]
[Download.Buy]
Posted by
Sonic Process
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16:36
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Genre: Ambient, Dub Techno, Glitch
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Grinderman "Grinderman"

Artist: Grinderman
Album: Grinderman
Label: Mute
Release date: 5 March 2007
Genre: Rock
Style: Garage Rock
Tracklisting:
01. Get It On
02. No Pussy Blues
03. Electric Alice
04. Grinderman
05. Depth Charge Ethel
06. Go Tell The Women
07. (I Don't Need You To) Set Me Free
08. Honey Bee (Let's Fly To Mars)
09. Man In The Moon
10. When My Love Comes Down
11. Love Bomb
Total running time: 39' 59"
[Grinderman - No Pussy Blues - Video Clip]
[Grinderman - BBC Culture Show Interview]
"Grinderman is a new band, comprised of four members of a band that's not at all new. Neither are its members, the head honcho of whom is now 50 years wiser. Nick Cave, Meltdown curator and murder ballad maker, has taken the opportunity, with Warren Ellis, Martyn Casey and Jim Sclavunos, to foist upon us a testosterone-fuelled, musical mid-life crisis steeped in alcohol and frustration. And he's picked up a guitar.
Although Grinderman is in essence a splinter group of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, there are no gently crooning numbers served by piano here. From the off, Get It On turns the volume to 11 and lets rip with electric bazouki, distorted guitar and ranting, devil-may-care lyrics. It sets a decrepit yet still standing scene for No Pussy Blues, where the ageing rocker takes home a groupie who "doesn't want to".
This being Cave, classy lyrical dexterity is never far away. But here the fire and brimstone preacher is a little less po-faced than much of his back catalogue, allowing humour (still black as coal) to gain the upper hand. So we get "Marcel Marceau" and "revolting chiuaua" in the same song, one in which our desperate protagonist eventually gives up on the ungrateful groupie and sets off in pursuit of her mother, only to find little luck in that direction either.
The title track is as stark, raw and depressed as anything Cave has done, with despondent guitar mournfully duetting with his washed-up, sad case lyrics. Not an immediate standout track, it's one of the record's real growers.
An element of the fantastical hangs over the album, with overtly dramatised titles like Depth Charge Ethel and Electric Alice, but the pace and instrumentation varies throughout, and 11 tracks pass in the blink of an eye.
With a combined age of a couple of centuries, these guys have no need to pander for the current mode for "secret tracks" - when Love Bomb superlatively closes the set, that's the lot - they've said their piece and now they've upped sticks and left, and their admirers can do little else but start this rollicking album over again." [source]
[Download.Buy]
Posted by
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Genre: Garage Rock
Saturday, April 07, 2007
Xela "For Frosty Mornings And Summer Nights"

Artist: Xela
Album: For Frosty Mornings And Summer Nights
Labels: Neo Ouija [re-release: Type Records]
Release dates: 27 January 2003 [re-release: 22 January 2007]
Genre: Electronic
Style: Glitch/Ambient
Tracklisting:
01. Afraid Of Monsters
02. Under The Glow Of Streetlights
03. Japanese Whispers
04. Inbetween Two Rooms
05. Impulsive Behaviour
06. An Abandoned Robot
07. The Long Walk Home At Midnight
08. Bobble Hats In Summer
09. Digital Winter
10. Last Breath
11. A Glance [re-release bonus track]
12. Danse Macabre [re-release bonus track]
Total running time: 60' 40"
"Recorded between shifts at his local Halfords, Xela's debut LP 'For Frosty Mornings and Summer Nights' was originally released four years ago and heralded John Twells' solo entrance onto the electronic stage through an album of gorgeously realised music that cast a shimmering spell on all those who experienced it. Now getting a welcome re-release through Twells' own Type imprint and boasting two new tracks plus some stunning Matthew Woodson cover art, 'For Frosty Mornings and Summer Nights' has withstood the greying ravages of time with considerable aplomb - appearing more sprightly and intimate now than it did first time round... For those who haven't already experienced Xela's work, 'For Frosty Mornings...' acts as a vital starting point - wherein Twells was able to distill his vast musical knowledge into the kind of music which ruptured the cosy IDM world and introduced a raft of unexpected adjuncts and classically informed compositions that sent the album well beyond the genre's increasingly insular boundaries. Outwardly more innocent than the blood red machinations of his later work, 'For Frosty Mornings...' nonetheless instills a subtle malignancy throughout which joyfully pervades the clear-eyed electronics and brings a distinctive bite to proceedings. With maturity well beyond his then bum-fluff years, Xela serves up an early show of strength through the hip-hop braced rhythm of 'Under The Glow Of Streetlights' - wherein a snowfall of effervescent synths and creamy electronic washes are knitted together with breathtaking melancholy. With a classically trained background under his hat, Xela very much understands the value of well thought out compositions that bestow the entire record with the kind of depth and grace which is all too often lacking within electronic music's clinical preoccupations. With an evident highlight being the stunning 'Bobble Hats In Summer', Xela captures that special something which transforms a beat-less cloud of floating melodies into the kind of emotional dart that takes out your senses in one pinpoint maneuver. Bolstered by bonus tracks 'A Glance' and 'Danse Macabre' (recorded shortly after the album sessions), 'For Frosty Mornings And Summer Nights' is the kind of reissue that more than justifies a second coming - brimming as it is with grace, beauty and ye olde vim. Classic." [source]
[Download.Buy]
Thursday, April 05, 2007
Low "Drums And Guns"

Artist: Low
Album: Drums And Guns
Label: Sub Pop
Release date: 20 March 2007
Genre: Rock
Style: Slowcore/Indie Rock
Tracklisting:
01. Pretty People
02. Belarus
03. Breaker
04. Dragonfly
05. Sandinista
06. Always Fade
07. Dust On The Window
08. Hatchet
09. Take Your Time
10. Your Poison
11. In Silence
12. Murderer
13. Violent Past
Total running time: 41' 24"
[Low - Breaker - Video Clip]
"Starting your album in 2007 with “All soldiers, they’re all gonna die” is not winning friends and influencing people. Nor is making the best record of your career eight tries in, with a new band member and few of the customary signs of an Important Work (no epic lengths, no guest stars, no “concepts”). Nobody told Alan Sparkhawk and Mimi Parker that, though, and no one reminded them they’re supposed to rest on their laurels and settle down. And so while Low ended their last album with “Walk Into the Sea,” a song gracefully accepting death, “Pretty People” begins Drums and Guns by taunting all and sundry with their mortality. That hard-won peace of mind hasn’t slipped away so much as burst asunder.
In hindsight, The Great Destroyer was even more definitely the right course of action, a necessary and successful loosening of the reins, the indie rock album they needed to make to see if they could. What it did for Low is less tangible than just prefigure Drums and Guns; here, they marry the bleak intensity of their earlier years with the aesthetic openness of their recent work that leaves them freer to experiment and diversify. The drum machines, loops, and newly dexterous grasp of the studio-as-instrument have no equivalent in Low’s previous work. It’s the establishment of a new form, one that discards the letter of what came before to better express the spirit.
But it’s not as if the band and producer Dave Fridmann’s work here has no relation to their history. At times—the organ-and-handclap reverie of “Breaker,” the way “Dragonfly” evokes Secret Name’s fragmentary closer, “Home”—it seems as if Drums and Guns is built out of past albums’ odd little diversions, the unsettling scraps that offset the warmer, brighter songs. Low used to be a guitar band, but Drums and Guns isn’t a guitar album; instead there are sounds and structures here that bring to mind everyone from Susumu Yokota (“Belarus”) to Benoit Pioulard (“Take Your Time”). It’s still identifiably Low, but richer and more diverse than before.
Mimi is, as always, the more inscrutable of the two songwriters. She breathes, “It won’t let me keep what I steal / Tell me, where can a girl get a meal?” in darkly gorgeous fashion on “Dust on the Window,” but elsewhere is content to let her voice blend with Alan’s. It’s Low’s oldest and most dependable trick—not quite harmony or unison, it’s the sound of gestalt, an emergence greater than its parts. Their songwriting has only improved with time, and while there’s not a “Will the Night” or “Over the Ocean,” the batch here quickly reveals itself to be the band’s strongest.
And while Low has one of the most coherent and absorbing sounds extant, it’s a frustratingly difficult one to write about. “Christian rock” tags—Sparhawk and Parker are Mormon—never fit, and from Trust onward they’ve hinted at a crisis of faith, whether in God or everything else. Alan has always been hard on himself and the world, and his songs have the curious, powerful property of showing with painful clarity how terrifyingly easy it is to lose ourselves without noticing, and yet remain a source of strength and comfort. The same band that sang “Are you a lion or a lamb / Are you as guilty as I am?” years ago now asks whether the Lord needs a murderer, continuing, “And I’ve read your book / Seems that you could use another fool.” What makes Low so interesting, above and beyond their musical qualities, is that these aren’t contradictory accounts—the band turn the harsh light of their search for meaning and peace on the high and low alike; the austerity of that quest is the only thing about their music that could be called monastic.
Any record where the single features Alan’s anguished cry of “My hand just kills and kills” isn’t going to mark an abandonment of Low’s central concern with how to exist fairly and happily in this world, but “Murderer” in particular is genuinely wracked, essential listening for anyone who thinks Sufjan Stevens reaches towards religious profundity. Like all true faith, Low’s is a difficult and personal one, and they’ve fully realized their ability to turn it into bracing, intelligent, and beautiful music. God only knows what they’re capable of now." [source]
[Download[pw:nodatta.blogspot.com].Buy]
Posted by
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09:44
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Genre: Indie Rock, Slowcore
Monday, April 02, 2007
Andrew Bird "Armchair Apocrypha"

Artist: Andrew Bird
Album: Armchair Apocrypha
Label: Fat Possum
Release date: 20 March 2007
Genre: Rock
Style: Folk Rock/Indie Rock
Tracklisting:
01. Fiery Crash
02. Imitosis
03. Plasticities
04. Heretics
05. Armchairs
06. Darkmatter
07. Simple X
08. The Supine
09. Cataracts
10. Scythian Empire
11. Spare-Ohs
12. Yawny At The Apocalypse
Total running time: 48' 23"
[Andrew Bird & Martin Dosh - Simple X - Live @ Bonnaroo]
"Armchair Apocrypha, released March 20, 2007 on Fat Possum (North America), Fargo Records (France), and Spunk Records (Australia) is Andrew’s 7th studio album. It was recorded mainly in Minneapolis at Crazy Beast Studios (Ben Durrant) and Third Ear Studios (Tom Herbers).
A cast of collaborators was drawn from the surrounding music scene: Drummer and keyboard player Martin Dosh, singer Haley Bonar, bassist Chris Morrissey, and multi-instrumentalist Jeremy Ylvisaker (who, along with Dosh, now features in Andrew’s live lineup) added their talents to the album, which was mixed at the famed, haunted Pachyderm Studios in Cannon Falls, Minnesota.
The album opens with “Fiery Crash,” which Bird describes as a superstitious incantation to protect him from plane crashes (“just a nod to mortality before you get on the plane”). As the album progresses, songs of “Darkmatter” (“do you wonder where the self resides, is it in your head or between your sides, and who will be that one who will decide its true location?), “Heretics” and “Plasticities” are sung with humor and lightness that belies their lyrical depth. “Scythian Empire,” amid lush pizzicato violin, considers an obscure corner of history and its lost civilizations, and apocalyptic horsemen. And so it goes through to the final notes of “Yawny at the Apocalypse,” varied and stunning musical tapestries embellished with lyrical vignettes and musings that veer fluidly from almost childlike innocence to seasoned, darkly comic wit, with unexpected twists at every turn." [source]
[Download.Buy]
Posted by
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19:51
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Genre: Folk Rock, Indie Rock

