Skeletal Lamping from Of Montreal was released last month on the 21st on Polyvinyl. It shot up the CMJ charts from 115 to number 2. But while the kids are diggin the sounds the album has gotten mixed reviews from the critics. Rolling Stone gave the album a great review and 4.5 out of 5 stars while Spin gave it a ho-hum 3 out 5. The ever critical Pitchfork is less than thrilled and gives the album 5.9 out of 10. We are not thrilled with the album and have to give it a thumbs down. Take a listen and make up your own mind:
SeeqPod - Playable Search
Wikipedia:
Of Montreal (officially typeset "of Montreal"[1]) is an American indie pop band formed in Athens, Georgia. Fronted by Kevin Barnes, it was among the second wave of groups to emerge from The Elephant 6 Recording Company.
History
The band was created by Kevin Barnes and named after a failed romance with a woman from Montreal, though the story changes in various interviews. Barnes was the only member of the "group" prior to his relocation to Athens, Georgia. There, he met Derek Almstead, later of the Circulatory System, M Coast, Elf Power etc., and Bryan Poole, who also performs as The Late B.P. Helium. Together, they recorded their first album, Cherry Peel, as well as The Bird Who Ate the Rabbit's Flower and The Bedside Drama: A Petite Tragedy.
After production on The Gay Parade began in 1998, Poole left the band to focus on his duties with Elf Power, another Elephant Six band from Athens. Barnes then recruited Jamey Huggins and Dottie Alexander, who had been performing together as Lightning Bug vs. Firefly, to play various instruments. Derek moved from drums to bass. The band was joined soon after by Marshmallow Coast's Andy Gonzales.
A number of singles and a re-release of The Bird Who Continues to Eat the Rabbit's Flower occurred before the advent of the band's third album, The Gay Parade in 1999. With contributions from several members of the Elephant Six collective at the time, it also featured artwork from Kevin's brother David Barnes, who would continue to do artwork for future albums.
Following the release of The Gay Parade, the band signed with Kindercore Records, who would release a number of singles and compilations. It wasn't until 2001 that Coquelicot Asleep in the Poppies: A Variety of Whimsical Verse would be released as a new album with original material. The album again featured contributions from across the Elephant Six spectrum.
Of Montreal front figure Kevin Barnes playing in Gothenburg, Sweden in 2005
In 2002, Aldhils Arboretum was released, with a slightly different sound than its predecessors, as the songs were more directly structured. This album marks the beginning of the change in Of Montreal's sound, with more danceable rhythms than before, particularly on the album's closer "Death Dance Of The Omipapas and Sons For You". A successful tour ensued, including the band's first trip to the UK, along with a tour-only EP.
Kindercore Records would fold shortly after the release of Arboretum, and Of Montreal's status was also threatened. Kevin got married, and Andy and Derek left the band. Barnes, being uncomfortable with the unrest, as well as some divisions within the band, took to writing and performing their 2004 album Satanic Panic in the Attic mostly by himself. Released by Polyvinyl Records, it became one of their more successful efforts to that point. The album marked a shift to an electronic bass, with drum machines and synthesizers featured in singles such as "Disconnect the Dots". The tour for that album also saw The Late B.P. Helium (Bryan Poole) rejoin the band, with some bass played by Kevin's partner Nina.
This style would continue to evolve into 2005's The Sunlandic Twins, which was even more a Barnes solo effort. Recorded in Athens, with the exception of one track recorded in Norway, it was a much more pronounced electronic album. The album became a success, mostly due to the singles "So Begins Our Alabee" and the MTV clip for "Wraith Pinned to the Mist (and Other Games)".
The band released several collections of singles in early 2006. Barnes recorded most of the band's 2007 release, Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?, by himself while living in Norway and Athens, Georgia. The switch to autobiographical themes of suicide, depression and isolation of the album was a direct product of his troubled personal life during that period. Barnes also released a companion CD to Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer? called Icons, Abstract Thee.[2] In 2007, Kevin Barnes performed five songs nude during a performance in Las Vegas.[3]
Of Montreal's next album, Skeletal Lamping, was released on October 21, 2008. The album was released in ten different formats, including conventional CD and vinyl, as well as t-shirts, button sets, wall decals, tote bags and a paper lantern, the latter formats replete with a digital download code for the album itself[4]. All items for the collection were designed by The Bee With Wheels (David Barnes) and Gemini Tactics (Nina Barnes), a coalition termed the 'Apollinaire Rave Colective'. In an essay addressing the concept behind the album's release, Kevin Barnes stated "We feel that there’s no reason to produce another object that just sits on a shelf. We only want to produce objects that have a function and that can be treasured for their singularness."[5] The album reached number one on emusic's Most Downloaded Albums Chart, as reported in the November 14, 2008 issue of Entertainment Weekly.
Style
Of Montreal performing live at Baltimore in 2007
The group has a style that is typical of many Elephant 6 bands due to its interest in combining musical experimentation and the basic tenets of pop, such as catchy melodies and sing-along choruses. The band's style has been influenced by not only more conventional indie pop and psychedelic music, but also by vaudeville and music hall on their earlier releases and by afrobeat, funk, krautrock and reggae in their more recent releases.
The band's style has been known to change between albums. At first, the band embraced a more simple, quirky, lo-fi indie pop sound, which occasionally bordered on twee pop. Later the band moved to a fuller sound, as seen on the concept albums The Gay Parade, and its follow-up, Coquelicot Asleep in the Poppies: A Variety of Whimsical Verse. These albums contain more narrative lyrics, as opposed to the rather personal lyrical matter of those preceding it, and often imitating the style of old 1950s radio plays.
2004's Satanic Panic in the Attic marked the result of an evolving change in style. The sound shifted to something more electronic with traditional structures, to be further advanced in later albums and new songs. In their most recent releases and concerts, the band has fully embraced a sort of techno-pop glam image, with little of their previous incarnations surfacing.
Lyrically, their style has changed dramatically throughout the years. In the beginning, many songs were narratives of personal or humorous situations, such as "Tim, I Wish You Were Born A Girl", from Cherry Peel. This style, however, changed with The Gay Parade, where many songs involve small narratives surrounding invented characters (in songs such as "Jacques Lamure", "The Autobiographical Grandpa", "Mimi Merlot" and "Rose Robert"). Others act as extracts from fictional conversations ("Advice From a Divorced Gentleman to His Bachelor Friend Considering Marriage" and "Good Morning Mr. Edminton" as examples). With Aldhils Arboretum came a slight return to the previous writing style, except following more poppy, classical lyrical structures (such as the use of choruses, which are generally absent in the Gay Parade/Coquelicot years). This style continued throughout Satanic Panic and The Sunlandic Twins to some extent. On the band's 2007 album Hissing Fauna: Are You the Destroyer?, the lyrics are much more personal than previously used, with songs detailing emotions within the speaker.
Another unique quality of the band is the fusion of ostensibly gloomy lyrics with bouncy, upbeat melodies and hooks. On Aldhils Arboretum, for example, the lyrics for tracks like "Doing Nothing" and "Old People in the Cemetery" focus on apathy, loneliness or death while being contrasted with cheerful instrumentation. Another example of this tendency is shown in their choice of covers; for example, Yoko Ono's "I Felt Like Smashing my Head Through a Clear Glass Window" from The Bird Who Continues to Eat the Rabbit's Flower.
Side projects
True to the style of most Elephant Six recording artists, Of Montreal's members have been in a variety of side projects and other bands.
The band itself has performed as the backing band for Marshmallow Coast on record and on tour.
My First Keyboard was the pseudonym used by Dottie Alexander to release the song "The You I Created" on the Kindercore singles club. Of Montreal acted as her backing band.
Kevin Barnes did a comedy tour with his wife, Nina, and his brother, David, called "A Pollinaire Rave".
Jamey Huggins released an album under the name "James Husband" which featured a cover of The Beatles' "We Can Work it Out".
Bryan Poole has a solo career as the Late B.P. Helium.
Kevin Barnes has recently been collaborating with Andrew VanWyngarden from MGMT, on a project called Blikk Fang (formerly Ocelot Fang).[1]
Derek Almstead has worked with many artists as a musician and engineer including his collaboration with Andy Gonzales M Coast, Elf Power, Circulatory System, and many more.
Kevin Barnes played keyboard in a song on Bright Eyes' album Letting Off the Happiness.
Ahmed Gallab has a solo career as Sinkane
The song "Wraith Pinned to the Mist (And Other Games)" can be heard on radio and television commercials with words changed for an advertisement for Outback Steakhouse. Similarly, their song "Every Day Feels Like Sunday" was used in television commercials for NASDAQ and Garmin GPS systems.
Discography
Studio albums
1997 Cherry Peel (Bar/None)
1998 The Bedside Drama: A Petite Tragedy (Kindercore)
1999 The Gay Parade (Bar/None)
2001 Coquelicot Asleep in the Poppies: A Variety of Whimsical Verse (Kindercore)
2002 Aldhils Arboretum (Kindercore)
2004 Satanic Panic in the Attic (Polyvinyl)
2005 The Sunlandic Twins (Polyvinyl)
2007 Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer? (Polyvinyl, #72 US)
2008 Skeletal Lamping (Polyvinyl, #38 US)
Compilations
2000 Horse & Elephant Eatery (No Elephants Allowed): The Singles and Songles Album (CD, Bar/None)
2001 The Early Four Track Recordings (CD/LP, Kindercore)
2001 An Introduction to Of Montreal (LP, Earworm)
2003 If He Is Protecting Our Nation, Then Who Will Protect Big Oil, Our Children? (CD, Track & Field)
2003 Ghetto Kitty Island Records Compilation (7", Split with Chicken on a Raft, Bart Davenport, and The Minders, Ghetto Kitty Island Records)
2004 The Gladiator Nightstick Collection (LP, Devil in the Woods)
2006 Satanic Twins (limited edition LP/digital release, Polyvinyl)
2006 Of Montreal Sampler (free promo CD, Polyvinyl)
EPs
1997 The Bird Who Ate the Rabbit's Flower (CD/LP, Kindercore)
1998 The Bird Who Continues to Eat the Rabbit's Flower (CD/LP, Kindercore)
2006 Deflated Chime, Foals Slightly Flower Sibylline Responses (CD, Polyvinyl)
2007 Icons, Abstract Thee (CD, Polyvinyl)
2007 Sony Connect Set (digital, Sony Connect/Polyvinyl)
Singles
1998 "Nicki Lighthouse" (7", 100 Guitar Mania)
1999 "Happy Happy Birthday To Me Singles Club: November" (7", Happy Happy Birthday To Me Records)
2000 "Archibald of the Balding Sparrows" (7", Kindercore, Split with Marshmallow Coast))
2001 "Kindercore Singles Club: September" (7", Kindercore, Split with Ladybug Transistor))
2001 "Split With the Late B.P. Helium" (7", Jonathan Whiskey)
2003 "Jennifer Louise" (7", Track & Field)
2004 "I Was a Landscape in Your Dream" (7", Harvest Time Recordings)
2006 "Microuniversity" (7", Park the Van)
2006 "Voltaic Crusher"/"Undrum to Muted Da" (7", Suicide Squeeze)
2006 "She's a Rejector" (7", Polyvinyl)
2007 "Suffer For Fashion" (CD, Polyvinyl)
2007 "Gender Mutiny Tour" (7", Polyvinyl)
2008 "Id Engager" (7", Polyvinyl)
Soundtracks
2005 Music from the OC: Mix 5 (Warner Bros./Wea)
2006 Weeds: Music from the Original Series, Volume 2
2008 Cloverfield
External links
Of Montreal's official site
Of Montreal on Elephant6.com
Myspace Page
Interviews
Of Montreal adds swag to its musical swagger Boston Herald
Lazy-i Interview from April 2004
Interview with the Cornell Daily Sun
Interview with Synthesis magazine
Of Montreal interview at exclaim
Of Montreal at rolling stone
Of Montreal concerts and interviews at NPR Music
'Linear Notes' from Kevin Barnes with DIRTY - 20th October, 2008
References
^ The DL: of Montreal Clear Up Capitalization Confusion - Spinner.com
^ Aversion.com: Desperate Measures, by Matt Schild, accessed 29 January 2007
^ Pitchfork: NSFW: Of Montreal's Kevin Barnes NAKED!
^ The Skeletal Lamping Collection
^ 'We Will Only Propagate Exceptional Objects'
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