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Description: |
LP+CD on Nonesuch |
| Format: |
LP (vinyl) |
| Genre(s): |
Indie Pop |
| Label: |
Nonesuch |
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Price: |
£17.79
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| Availability: |
Sold out / currently unavailable. Sorry! |
What their label says...
Ltd LP Heavyweight 140 gram high-performance vinyl. Includes bonus CD of the complete album.
TRACKLISTING: 1 You Must Be Out of Your Mind, 2 Interlude, 3 We Are
Having a Hootenanny, 4 I Don’t Know What To Say, 5 The Dolls’ Tea
Party, 6 Everything Is One Big Christmas Tree, 7 Walk A Lonely Road, 8
Always Already Gone, 9 Seduced And Abandoned, 10 Better Things, 11
Painted Flower, 12 The Dada Polka, 13 From A Sinking Boat, OVERVIEW:
Magnetic Fields' third Nonesuch disc, ‘Realism’, is the flipside to the
industrial pop of the quartet's brilliant 2008 homage to, of all
things, the clangourous sound of the Jesus and Mary Chain. While
‘Distortion’ was recorded quickly and noisily in the stairwells and
rooms of the New York City apartment building to which
singer-songwriter-bandleader Stephen Merritt was about to bid adieu for
California, ‘Realism’ was cut in the distortion-free environs of a Los
Angeles studio, and its sound is as pristine as a plein-air painting.
There are no drum kits to be heard, and the fascinatingly varied
instrumentation - guitars, accordions, violins, cellos, tablas, banjos,
tuba, even a smattering of mellifluous falling leaves - did not need to
be plugged in. And, as with ‘Distortion’, the album credits emphasize:
No Synths With tongue only slightly in cheek, Merritt has taken
to declaring his ‘folk’ album. To get the point across, there is an
upbeat, sing-along number early in the set called ‘We Are Having a
Hootenany’. Merritt's inspirations, however, were the orchestrated,
mostly British folk of the late sixties/early seventies - which owe as
much to sixties psychedelia as to traditional music - and the work of
Judy Collins, who stretched the boundaries of ‘folk’ with the
chamber-pop arrangements of such albums as ‘In My Life’ and
‘Wildflowers’. Like Collins, Merritt favours variety and
theatricality. She skipped from Jacques Brel to the Beatles; he goes
from the trippy, toy-box melodies of ‘The Dolls' Tea Party’ and
‘Painted Flower’ to the foot-stomping rhythms of ‘The Dada Polka’ (for
which one only has to get up and "do something"). There's even a
deceptively festive holiday number, ‘Everything Is One Big Christmas
Tree’, featuring a lusty chorus sung in German - Kurt Weill in a
holiday mood. In content, Merritt's songs veer between longing &
loneliness, desire & dismissal, romance & revenge. Reality is
as distorted as ever, and the characters who populate his songs are
never just plain folk. Along with his long-time band-mates Sam
Davol, Claudia Gonson and John Woo, Merritt is joined again by vocalist
Shirley Simms and accordionist Daniel Handler (AKA novelist Lemony
Snicket, with whom Merritt created the Gothic Archies' faux children's
disc, The Tragic Treasury). Also on board: horn player Johnny Blood and
violinist Ida Pearle, familiar to fans of Magnetic Fields' earlier,
independently released work. The quartet, along with Simms, are
planning a tour of the North America and Europe to coincide with the
release of ‘Realism’.
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