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 Post subject: Year In Review (23): Fiery Furnaces - Rehearsing My Chair+EP
PostPosted: Sat Dec 24, 2005 8:52 am 
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Average Metacritic score 63 (23 Reviews):

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The Fiery Furnaces
Rehearsing My Choir (Rough Trade)
US release date: 25 October 2005
Rating: (80)

Even for a band eager to flummox its fans, Rehearsing My Choir is a curious album. For a start, it features vocals by the 83-year-old grandmother of The Fiery Furnaces' two main members. Then there's the sound of those vocals, which aren't so much sung as spoken by a woman too aged to be drawn out by drama. The rustle of a lap-warming afghan is all but audible in a background blocked by vaudevillian music played on harpsichords, saloon pianos, rocking guitars, and junkshop electronics. Then there's the story, which seems to have something to do with a mid-century Chicago haunted by characters like two boys named Kevin ("You mean two jerks!" Grandma says) and a doughnut-making doctor who treats gunshot wounds with delicious blackberry jelly.

Any talk of a straight story would overstate The Fiery Furnaces' apparent interest in coherence, but the flickering narrative works to pull ears closer to the band's most wowing musical offering to date. Like live shows that make reworked medley madness of songs from Gallowsbird's Bark and Blueberry Boat, the new album bolts between ideas that sound chaotic and choreographed to the extreme. Songs shift between snippets of electrified disco, Venetian court music, bent blues, and cosmic rock without falling off their tracks, and the similarly scattered narrative throws out enough through-lines to suggest themes that prove as elusive as they are allusive. The grandmother comes off as wry and comfortable with the word-soup phrasings she utters alongside regular singer Eleanor Friedberger, who in turn sounds studied within the discursive soundtracks crafted by her brother Matt.

The Friedbergers have worked to create a weird-family myth almost from their start, and Rehearsing My Choir goes a long way toward fortifying it with fantastical tales presented the same as believable ones. It all transpires like a bizarre radio play—or a Dada reconstitution of one of those Family Ties episodes in which the Keatons sat around the couch, flashing back to clips from the past, guffawing over a family history they couldn't begin to divide into fact and fiction.

---Reviewed by Andy Battaglia
--November 9th, 2005


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PostPosted: Sat Dec 24, 2005 8:53 am 
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EP = blah


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PostPosted: Sat Dec 24, 2005 8:55 am 
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http://pitchforkmedia.com/record-review ... s/ep.shtml

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Fiery Furnaces
EP (Rough Trade/Sanctuary; 2005)
US release date: 11 January
Rating: 8.9 (89)


Okay, I'm done being a nice guy about this: If you don't like Blueberry Boat, I don't like you. It's no longer a matter of taste, other than the fact that I have good taste, whereas you, Fiery Furnaces-hater, do not. Don't have time to take in the full sweeping grandeur of Blueberry Boat's 80 minutes? I have no respect for your calendar priorities. To those who find their multiple-movement symphonies and keyboard-fetish arrangements overcooked, I feel only loathing, utter disdain, and approximately one tablespoon of pity! And for the few of you that cannot handle the frenetic uber-medley that is a Fiery Furnaces live set, I want to make provocative documentary films about your inept and offensive taste and take them on the festival circuit.

But if my depraved fanboy rants and threats don't convince you, this here spartanly-titled EP just might. Dare you infidels bear witness as this collection of the Furnaces' assorted table scraps easily outshines most bands' main course? Not content to merely isolate the most accessible tune from their long players and ship a CD-R out to campus hundred-watts, Eleanor and Matthew Friedberger are prolific vinyl-pressers, releasing new or reinterpreted material betwixt and in conjunction with their albums. EP does the Soulseek virtual crate-digging for Furnaces devotees, collecting most of these odds and sods while wisely catching amnesia on their less-collectible Clash and Fall covers.

I know of some misguided souls who find that the accoutrements of Blueberry Boat's three-ring concept album circus overwhelm any songcraft talents the siblings Friedberger originally exhibited on Gallowsbird's Bark, and for these people my hatred burns only slightly less bright. Nevertheless, EP starts off with a trilogy of tunes that should lay this ridiculous claim to rest, restoring their most recent single to its original director's cut. Running a little over 10 minutes, the suite simultaneously reminds the doubters of the Furnaces' considerable pop abilities, while not compromising on the Casio blitzes or thematic density of more recent work.

If "Single Again", in a slightly expanded take, remains a bit cold in with its jump-rope chant refrain and stiff drums, reinstated bridge "Here Comes the Summer", is the perfect thaw, showcasing the duo's deft hand with electronic rhythms, guitar pedals, and swooning melodies. "Summer" seasonally segues into "Evergreen", the band's sweetest ballad to date, and the first that comes close to making the Carpenters comparisons more than just commentary on the Friedberger's slightly creepy sibling dynamics.

There's enough to digest in that opening salvo to fulfill the effort's modest title, but there's still a half-hour smattering of B-sides and remakes for dessert. A few ("Duffer St. George", "Smelling Cigarettes") swerve towards the ADD collage style of Blueberry Boat's longer tracks, telling similarly intricate stories of infidelity, drinking, and gallivanting around London. Matthew's imaginary Cockney accent takes the lead more often than on the full-lengths, whether on the tongue-twisting sea shanty of "Cousin Chris" or the Bowie piano-rock of "Sing for Me".

Meanwhile, the complete reconstruction of "Tropical Ice-land" featured here is a taste of the band's Dylan-like compulsion to perennially revise the back catalog, expanding the sing-songy original in every direction, right down to a wonderfully gratuitous backwards-vocal verse. In the end, it's perhaps this quality of perpetual evolution, best exemplified by their delirious live shows, that has me drawing Fiery Furnaces logos on my All-Stars-- few other bands of the indie world seem to have such mercurial aspirations.

EP then comes off like a quick appendix to the band's work so far, concentrating their strengths in parts while elsewhere lovingly dumping the stray ideas that may not fit into their next conceptual flight. That it still manages to skirt the hazards of being a for-fan's-only release only deepens my stalker-love, not to mention the accompanying abhorrence for all who don't see the light. Honestly, how do you people wake up in the morning; you pathetic, mouth-breathing [the remaining 1,000 words of diatribe deleted by Pitchfork editors, who cordially apologize to the readership for Mr. Mitchum's unfortunate outburst -Ed.]

-Rob Mitchum, January 12, 2005


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PostPosted: Sat Dec 24, 2005 9:14 am 
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Pitchfork review Wrote:
Okay, I'm done being a nice guy about this: If you don't like Blueberry Boat, I don't like you. It's no longer a matter of taste, other than the fact that I have good taste, whereas you, Fiery Furnaces-hater, do not. Don't have time to take in the full sweeping grandeur of Blueberry Boat's 80 minutes? I have no respect for your calendar priorities. To those who find their multiple-movement symphonies and keyboard-fetish arrangements overcooked, I feel only loathing, utter disdain, and approximately one tablespoon of pity!


BB was the second best record of last year. I love the E.P. as it will be my favorite E.P. of 2005. I got scared with this grandmother album so I haven’t and won’t hear it. They are misunderstood, I think, but I love this band and can’t wait for the next proper album.

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PostPosted: Sat Dec 24, 2005 10:40 am 
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BeeOK Wrote:
Pitchfork review Wrote:
I love this band and can’t wait for the next proper album.


Me too!!


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PostPosted: Sat Dec 24, 2005 2:03 pm 
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Dig the EP, haven't yet heard Rehearsing my Choir in full, but I will. I think Blueberry Boat was my number 2 last year and RmC seems to be no different in that it's just as polarizing. It's interesting music overall. I think they're supposed to release another one in 2006.

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