Thursday, June 4, 2009

The Fiery Furnaces


Claire took a break from her cool job (doing curating work for the Philadelphia Museum of Art) that I'm jealous of (and in no way qualified for) to pull together this playlist covering the music of the Fiery Furnaces. My hunch is that while having art brainz is helpful in appreciating oddball song structure grandma vox weirdo rock, it's not required. So the rest of us should listen up.

As the Fiery Furnaces prepare to release their seventh studio album since 2003, I’m Going Away (Thrill Jockey), on July 21, I thought it a good opportunity to look back on this prolific band’s first four years, comprising five full-length albums, as well as a collection of b-sides and singles worthy of their own full-length (EP, 2005). The Fiery Furnaces also released a live album, Remember, last year, and Matt Friedberger, one half of the band’s brother-sister braintrust (his sister Eleanor is his cohort and foil), released his solo double album, Winter Women and Holy Ghost Language School, in 2006. I’m not including any tracks from Remember because The Fiery Furnaces’ live act is so frenetic—an hour-plus medley of songs from their entire catalogue, reworked and overlaid—that I can’t imagine separating out only one or two tracks from such an intricate whole.

The Fiery Furnaces have developed a bit of a reputation for being a difficult band to pin down. Although I hope that this playlist will underscore the occasionally obscured resonances between their albums, nearly every record since their rollicking 2003 debut, Gallowsbird’s Bark, has taken a radically different conceptual bent from the album before it. 2004’s Blueberry Boat remains Friedberger and Friedberger’s magnum opus. It’s the most dense of their albums, with several tracks clocking in at three times the length of the typical three-minute pop song, and complex narratives and characters in each song, some of which pass through several increasingly baroque movements in the development of these tales, such as the potential fratricide of “Chief Inspector Blancheflower” and the battle against pirates in the album’s title track. Their follow-up, 2005’s Rehearsing My Choir, was even more challenging, pairing Eleanor’s vocals with those of the Friedbergers’ grandmother on pseudo-biographical songs that seemed even more ramshackle at times than the mini-rock operas of Blueberry Boat. The excellent, although less concept-driven EP (2005) collected the band’s poppier b-sides and rarities and proved a harbinger of things to come, as both Bitter Tea (2006) and Widow City (2007) have culled the depths of 70s and 80s radio (with the occasional old-timey digression) for more cohesive, beat and riff-driven songs, and we are left to wonder where the Friedbergers will go from here. “Like all the Fiery Furnaces' other albums,” the band promises, “I'm Going Away sounds different than all The Fiery Furnaces' other albums.” They’re playing a few dates on the East Coast in June, a month before the release of the album, and while the songs won’t sound anything like the records, live might be the best introductory experience to the band, as their uber-mix will surely dwarf my fifteen-track attempt here.

1) Sweet Spots / EP / 2005
2) Blueberry Boat / Blueberry Boat / 2004
3) Evergreen / Single Again single / 2004)
4) I’m Gonna Run / Gallowsbird’s Bark / 2003)
5) The Wayward Granddaughter / Rehearsing My Choir / 2005
6) My Egyptian Grammar / Widow City / 2007
7) Here Comes the Summer / EP / 2005
8) Quay Cur / Blueberry Boat / 2004
9) Automatic Husband / Widow City / 2007
10) Single Again / Single Again single / 2004
11) Crystal Clear / Gallowsbird’s Bark / 2003
12) Oh Sweet Woods / Bitter Tea / 2006
13) Chief Inspector Blancheflower / Blueberry Boat / 2004
14) Tropical-Iceland (remix) / EP / 2005
15) Benton Harbor Blues / Bitter Tea / 2006

Total Time: 76:25. YAHPLAY FOUL!!! Disqualified (from nothing) for exceeding the 74 minute time limit. Rulz, rulz, rulz...

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Spencer Krug (Sunset Rubdown, Wolf Parade, Swan Lake)


Spencer Krug is my favorite songwriter of this decade. Plain and simple. Frustratingly, despite my best efforts to spread this Krug love to anyone who'll listen, only a few friends have joined me in this zombie-like state of obsessive appreciation. Hopefully this playlist will help to change that.

This was an especially enjoyable playlist to make. Part of the reason this came together so easily was the glut of fresh material available to draw upon. Since he started releasing music about five years ago or so, Krug has been remarkably prolific, serving as a main creative force behind three full time bands. Wolf Parade, where he shares songwriting duties with Dan Boeckner (who has since founded The Handsome Furs), has released two full length albums in that time. Swan Lake, a trio comprised of Krug, Dan Bejar (of Destroyer and The New Pornographers) and Carey Mercer (of Frog Eyes), has also released two full length albums in the same time span. Finally, Krug's main project, Sunset Rubdown, is set to this month release their fourth album (Dragonslayer) since 2005. That's a lot of music! Oh, and he's been touring consistently with Wolf Parade and Sunset Rubdown during that entire time. Double oh, on top of all that, he's also put in service as a part-time member of Frog Eyes as well. Jeez.

But this vigorous pace by no means reflects some sloppy, scattershot approach to songwriting. Each of these projects serve to showcase a different side of Krug's significant talent, but together they share a common sensibility that bears his unmistakable imprint. For that reason, every one of his releases- regardless of the band name attached to it- seems to contribute to a larger mosaic of music. For instance, the second half of the playlist contains three songs ("All Fires," "Nightingale / December Song," " and "I'll Believe In Anything") that are culled from each of his projects and span a spectrum from acoustic ballad to atmospheric prog-rocker to anthemic love song, but that also each share an over-arching lyrical theme of souls existing like burning fires. This interconnectedness across bands and albums makes tracking Krug's work all the more fun and rewarding, while also buoying the songs with a welcomed sense of purposefulness and raw emotion. It's that unfiltered artistry at the heart of Krug's songs that helps to make for music that, upon repeated listens, reveals itself to be unusually personal and immensely satisfying.

1) Stadiums and Shrines II / Sunset Rubdown- Shut Up I Am Dreaming / 2006
2) Idiot Heart / Sunset Rubdown- Dragonslayer / 2009
3) You Are Runner and I Am My Father's Son / Wolf Parade- Apologies to the Queen Mary / 2005
4) Upon on Your Leopard, Upon on the End of Your Feral Days / Sunset Rubdown- Random Spirit Lover / 2007
5) The Courtesan Has Sung / Sunset Rubdown- Random Spirit Lover / 2007
6) You Go On Ahead (Trumpet Trumpet II) / Sunset Rubdown- Dragonslayer / 2009
7) Apistat Commander / Sunset Rubdown (Covering Xiu Xiu)- Remixed and Covered / 2007
8) Shut Up I Am Dreaming of Places Where Lovers Have Wings / Sunset Rubdown- Shut Up I Am Dreaming / 2006
9) All Fires / Swan Lake- Beast Moans / 2007
10) Nightingale / December Song / Sunset Rubdown- Dragonslayer / 2009
11) For the Pier (and Dead Shimmering) / Sunset Rubdown- Random Spirit Lover / 2007
12) The Taming of the Hands that Came Back to Life / Sunset Rubdown- Random Spirit Lover / 2007
13) I'll Believe In Anything / Wolf Parade- Apologies to the Queen Mary / 2005
14) The Men are Called Horsemen There / Sunset Rubdown- Shut Up I Am Dreaming / 2006

Total Time: 73:59