Archive for the 'orchestrated' Category

Beirut Soundtracks France: “The Flying Club Cup”

[city in france]

Before even dipping into the latest Beirut offering The Flying Club Cup there’s a whole host of things to keep in mind.

For starters, while not a concept album, per se, Zach Condon was explicit with the intent of the album, and that intent is not so distant from Sufjan’s own 50 States project, on a much smaller (practical?) scale. Each song is meant to carry with it the air of a particular city in France, and as Joshua points out in his review, it makes atmospheres come alive with rich vibrancy through orchestration just the way the soundtrack for Amelie was able to. While listening to the album and trying to draw connections, it’s sometimes just as easy as a cursory glance at the track name to know which city it’s attached to, cities like “Nantes” or “Cherbourg” are directly connected to the track names (tracks #2 and #11, respectively), while others require a little more digging. Track #12, for instance commemorates the statue of Saint Appolina held at the church in Locronan, and still others are plays on French words (track #5: La Banlieu -> “banlieue” as French for “suburbs”). Translations aren’t always as fruitful, with tracks like “Un Dernier Verre (Pour La Route)” translating to “Last Drink (For The Road)” or track #8 “Forks and Knives (La Fete)” is fĂȘteor celebration.

“Forks and Knives” celebrates with violins, and with easy-come drums that sway to-and-fro, backed by voices that almost cheer in the background, cheering for one old man easing and passing away “he means well, sang ‘I’ve got stories of wine, and of course my childhood forks and knives and then the hospital bed where I turn my life over and over again.” It is homage to the folks who live, breathe, and fade away from the lives of the cities themselves. If it wasn’t for the instrumentals, you might even well up, fortunately it is dosed up with a senile, blissful cheer and you can’t help but sway along.

Interestingly, that last track is followed up by “In The Mausoleum” which stings of piano work reminiscient of Charlie Brown, and for me at least, conjures up in those first few strokes an image of the children scurrying along concrete floors. I also can’t help but think of the famous bass-section keys from “Linus and Lucy“.

If you have a knack for Eastern-European instrumentals like I do, you’ll be delighted to know that Jeremy Barnes (A Hawk and a Hacksaw) is once again a real and strong driving force for the studio work on Club Cup, as is Owen Pallett (of Final Fantasy and Arcade Fire fame) present in supplying guest vocals and even some of the signature string arrangements he’s known for. The trio working in tandem like this is undoubtedly one of the reasons that Beirut, since Gulag has seemed to have aged nearly a decade, successfully generating a palette of decadent tracks, and without compromise can seamlessly move about between the playful and the emotional.

As a final and important note, the cover, lush with old-time beach fun (read: bold stripes and over-clothed women in lawn chairs) was Mr. Condon’s beloved inspiration that hung on his wall during his in-home composing sessions for The Flying Club Cup: “Back in the early 1900s, like the 1910s or 1920s, there used to be this hot air balloon festival in Paris– it’s titled after that and after this very bizarre 1910 photo I found. It’s one of the first color photos ever made, at the World’s Fair, and it…shows all these ancient hot air balloons about to take off in the middle of Paris. I just thought it was the most surreal image I’d seen in a long time.”

[flying club cup]

listen:
Beirut - Nantes
Beirut - Forks and Knives (La Fete)
Beirut - In The Mausoleum
Vince Guaraldi Trio - Linus and Lucy

The album is slated for an October 9th release on Ba Da Bing records, and Amazon has pre-orders up for when you’re ready.

[header image cropped from this photo]

5 days ’til The Fragile Army marches.

[mMmm]

Well, that 23-piece theremin-playing, flautistic, guitaring, beatsy-tromboning, keying, dancing & harmonizing symphonic mini-orchestra The Polyphonic Spree have their latest LP The Fragile Army launching in just under a week now, and I’m actually a little giddy about it.

This gang/small army is one in particular I have a hard time explaining to anyone. I suppose because much of their music is new age happy-go-lucky gospel with a quirky unexplainable passion; it strikes some people as just plain odd. Truthfully, the appeal to me is one of curiosity. Like a estranged anthropologist I look towards these people and wonder. That this energy can stem from somewhere other than the Almighty is a curious phenomenon to be sure, especially considering their performances are as awkwardly infectious as any Southern passion.

The Fragile Army is more political in nature than previous works, following in step essentially where Soldier Girl left off: in the heart of current wartime turmoil. DeLaughter claims “it’s very specific in its agenda, [and] I believe it’s our own battle cry.” What that agenda is, you’ll have to find out for yourselves.

The album hits shelves June 19th on TVT Records - in the meantime you can still pre-order your own copy direct from the Spree website in 1 of 4 merch-package deals.

mp3:
The Polyphonic Spree - Section 24 (The Fragile Army)
The Polyphonic Spree - Section 27 (Mental Cabaret)

Mirah and the Bug Orchestra (i.e. Spectratone International)

Mirah Yom Tov Zeitlyn

Concept albums are by nature few and far between. Everyone knows Pink Floyd’s The Wall, and my favourite was always Dredg’s El Cielo but it’s always been a noble risk considering how many artists try and fail.

Somehow using the full breadth of an album’s length, and the way it can shift in mood between songs (by the very way tracks tend to proceed), and then the foresight to thread each song together - this has always been to my taste, and I imagine that goes for anyone without a severe attentional disorder.

Mirah’s latest Share This Place: Stories and Observations (surprise, surprise), is just such an album, and what’s that? It will even assault its audience on a variety of sensory levels. Which is to say, it’s not just a musical adventure: it comes packaged and prepared to draw you into a full multi-media experience, with the short film Credo Cigalia (see it here) bundled alongside the album.

While the video is a bit meek, leaning more on the “Let’s get kids excited about BUGS!” mentality, the album is far from that. Share This Place is, on a large scale, a biological observation piece written in memory of Jean Henri Fabre. Jean Henri was an early-20th-century entomologist who somehow managed to synthesize biology with poetry and a love for life, especially the small and seemingly insignificant kind.

Mirah manages to capture Mr. Fabre’s essence by peering up at our gigantic world through the lens of a love-sick fly, a proud lightning-bug, a clever dung beetle… each tale such as these is delivered in the classic form of monologue, and grounded in such biological and psychological ideas as instinct, drive, passion and consciousness while remaining true to poetic form and aesthetic. Toss that with some quirky french instrumentals from the Spectratone International accompaniment and you’ve got both a work of art and a work riddled with deep ins-and-outs (ala arthropods!).

Share This Place is due for release August 7th from K Records. Mirah is also on tour with one of two stops North of the border you may just want to attend:
August 12th in Montreal @ La Sala Rossa

August 13th in Toronto @ Lee’s Palace

mp3:
My Prize
Love Song of the Fly

Godspeed You! But Don’t Forget The Small Fry.