TRACKLISTING:
01. Like Home
02. Two Friends Like Us
03. The Propellors
04. The Things That I Know
05. Fits and Starts
06. Somehow Bound
07. Under Glass
08. Sleeping In Our Clothes
09. Nothing Glorious
10. Our Changing Skins
OVERVIEW:
First conceived in a museum of antique arcade machines and later actualized in a small Victorian home
on the banks of the Willamette River, Musée Mécanique’s Hold This Ghost began its journey in a high school literature class.
Sean
Ogilvie and Micah Rabwin met, started their first band together, played
their first shows, and wrote their first jointly-penned songs before
either of them could legally drive a car.
Their early friendship
fostered a creative partnership that has endured distance, estrangement
and more than a decade of their lives.
While living in the Bay Area of California, the two songwriters developed an affinity for the collection of
vintage
coin-operated games, player pianos and novelties housed at the Musée
Mécanique (Mechanical Museum) located on San Francisco’s Fisherman’s
Wharf. Much like the recordings of Hold This Ghost, the machines within
the museum are a hybrid of technology and humanity: mechanical by
nature, but animated via a dedicated craftsmanship that reveals the
unique flaws and personality of each.
Their Portland, Oregon home studio, itself a collection of interesting instruments and antiques,
is peppered in every corner with second-hand flotsam. Tack pianos, trumpets, musical saws and garage
sale Casio keyboards mingle among forgotten amateur landscape paintings, broken 1930s-era radios
and hand-cranked ice cream makers. Their neighborhood - an integral source of the album’s inspiration
- is flanked by giant Redwoods that overlook the scenic Willamette River. Nearby, an eerie mausoleum
perches above a wildlife refuge and one of the oldest running amusement parks in the world.
Excited by the album’s story and songs, producer Tucker Martine mixed Hold This Ghost with a creative
vision
that perfectly echoed that of Rabwin and Ogilvie. Now, Rabwin and
Ogilvie are joined on stage by multi-instrumentalists Matthew Rubin
Berger, Jeffery Boyd and Brian Perez, bringing the album to life.
“It is [the] ability to viscerally effect an audience that make[s] Musée Mécanique such a powerful,
if
unusual, folk force. Their shy yet florid debut is tinged with sadness,
like a painted carousel sitting empty in winter, mourning for a time
that they—or we—never even knew.” – Pitchfork
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