Senator GAR in 2010! Wrote:
DumpJack Wrote:
shiv Wrote:
DumpJack Wrote:
shiv Wrote:
riyl: lucero, bright eyes, the hold steady, springsteen
The only thing preventing me from downloading this album is that second artist.
i only put that because the singer kind of sounds like him.
Okay, I'll give it a shot.
There's some kind of prog or overwrought rock opera influence here. I don't know that I will listen to it enough to grasp the overarching themes, though. Not bad, just not grab you by the ears good either.
Quote:
Nobody ever accused Jersey punks Titus Andronicus of being unambitious. They are, after all, the type of band who included a song called "Upon Viewing Brueghel's 'Landscape with the Fall of Icarus'" on their first album. But when then band returns with their sophomore album, they will leap full-on into the weird universe of the concept album. Brave souls!
The Monitor, the band's follow-up to The Airing of Grievances, will drop March 9 on XL. According to singer Patrick Stickles in a press release, the LP is "sort of" a concept album about the Civil War: "It doesn't take place in olden times, nor does it necessarily feature any characters that participated in that conflict. Really, it is a record about how the conflicts that led our nation into that great calamity remain unresolved, and the effect that this ongoing division has on our personal relationships and our behavior and how they're all out to get us (or maybe not?) and yadda yadda yadda."
The band recorded the album last August in New Paltz, New York with Airing of Grievances producer and engineer Kevin McMahon. Members of the Hold Steady, Wye Oak, Ponytail, and Vivian Girls all appear on the album. Also of note: some of the songs here are long. One track lasts 14 minutes, and first single "Four Score and Seven" runs nearly nine. And no, the track "Theme From 'Cheers'" is not a cover of the theme song from the tv show "Cheers".
UPDATE: The band's publicist has dropped us some info on a few of these guest appearances. Apparently, the album features a few spoken-word interludes in which various people portray Civil War-era historical figures. So: Hold Steady frontman Craig Finn plays Walt Whitman, appropriately enough, while Vivian Girls leader Cassie Ramone plays Jefferson Davis, absurdly enough. Meanwhile, someone named Okey Canfield Chenoweth plays Abraham Lincoln, and Double Dagger frontman Nolen Strals (who also designed the cover art) is William Lloyd Garrison.
The band will release "Four Score and Seven" as a double A-side 7" on February 9, splitting the track into two parts so it'll fit on the vinyl. We've got both parts to stream or download below. The first part is a stately, rootsy march with enough brass and harmonica to call up pleasant memories of Bright Eyes' epic "Road to Joy". Part two gets a whole lot messier and more anarchic, and that closing "It's still us against them" mantra is going to make for a hell of a cathartic singalong when they play it live.
Speaking of playing live, Titus will tour the U.S. around the time of The Monitor's release, and they'll stop off at SXSW. They'll also play New York's Mercury Lounge on New Years Eve.