(Some Guy) "That band was never, in any way, what you would call tight or polished. They were like, if you took a carnival, and you played it on an AM radio, and then you stuck it in a bucket with a microphone and recorded it"
what is this article supposed to be? is it a book review or just some dude that wants to tell the internet that he's never heard of arcade fire or neutral milk hotel?
Did this guy even bother to listen to an Arcade Fire album? They're quite lush in sound, professionally produced, and considering the number of players involved--very tight.
Funsucker:Did this guy even bother to listen to an Arcade Fire album? They're quite lush in sound, professionally produced, and considering the number of players involved--very tight.
//huh huh, he said tight
He's talking about Neutral Milk Hotel. Sounds about right to me.
Bizarre thing to go green on Fark... but the two Arcade Fire albums are incredible.
I know most of the Rush-lovin' Fark crowd hate them... but I dunno, their albums are great. And before you accuse me of being some hipster or something, I'm a dad on the other side of the world who likes Rob Zombie, Royksopp, Oasis and Ryan Adams, so whatever.
SuperCatBarf:I was a huge Bruce Hornsby fan. Even now, you're more likely to hear Hootie & the Blowfish on my iPod than, say, Grizzly Bear.
I'm assuming this was in TFA.
It bothers me quite a bit to see Hornsby mentioned in the same breath as Hootie.
As a composer, arranger, keyboard player, singer, and lyricist, Hornsby very nearly stands alone in terms of sheer talent. Spirit Trail is one of few double albums whose length does not seem self-indulgent and unnecessary. His recent collaboration with Ricky Skaggs was great. With Paul Simon and Peter Gabriel, he is one of the handful of 20th century artists whose output continues to show artistic growth. He is one of few white folks who could be called 'soulful' without stretching the meaning of the word.
I like Grizzly Bear, but you could give them a month to come up with a song, and Hornsby could follow it up with an improvised piece that blows it out of the water. Link (new window) Link (new window)
Funsucker:Did this guy even bother to listen to an Arcade Fire album? They're quite lush in sound, professionally produced, and considering the number of players involved--very tight.
The comments weren't made about Arcade Fire, they were made about Neutral Milk Hotel.
breathe:i would go as far as to say ITAOTS would be higher on my list of best 90s albums than nirvana's incredibly polished nevermind would be.
Speaking as a fairly big Nirvana fan, I agree wholeheartedly. In The Aeroplane is a monumental record, one that more than 10 years later still breaks my heart every time I hear it.
DKinMN:He is one of few white folks who could be called 'soulful' without stretching the meaning of the word.
I saw a show that featured Hornsby and Marc Cohn. Cohn has a voice you have to hear live to believe, and Hornsby's smart enough to keep his playing subtle yet interesting when he's backing someone up. One of the best shows I've ever seen - both of these guys are generally underrated.
shoegaze99:Speaking as a fairly big Nirvana fan, I agree wholeheartedly. In The Aeroplane is a monumental record, one that more than 10 years later still breaks my heart every time I hear it.
this article^ made its way around fark a year or so ago. really good look at jeff mangum.
"That band was never, in any way, what you would call tight or polished. They were like, if you took a carnival, and you played it on an AM radio, and then you stuck it in a bucket with a microphone and recorded it"
How the hell did this guy get a hold of my band's EP?
thomps
2009-11-04 11:13:04 PM
Toshiro Mifune's Letter Opener
2009-11-04 11:24:51 PM
El Freak
2009-11-04 11:55:54 PM
Funsucker
2009-11-05 12:06:39 AM
//huh huh, he said tight
Mobkey
2009-11-05 12:10:22 AM
//huh huh, he said tight
He's talking about Neutral Milk Hotel. Sounds about right to me.
HappyHarryHardOn
2009-11-05 12:24:03 AM
StabbyMcRunFast
2009-11-05 01:44:04 AM
farkingismybusiness
2009-11-05 02:31:00 AM
breathe
2009-11-05 03:00:21 AM
aeroplane and even avery island make up for lack of polish with the shear heart and songwriting on display.
i would go as far as to say ITAOTS would be higher on my list of best 90s albums than nirvana's incredibly polished nevermind would be.
SuperCatBarf
2009-11-05 03:54:07 AM
End of story. Polish music is irrelevant to this genre.
mekkab
2009-11-05 06:43:43 AM
End of story. Polish music is irrelevant to this genre.
Agreed.
/Likes NMH when he doesn't get too whiny
danduran
2009-11-05 07:59:55 AM
I know most of the Rush-lovin' Fark crowd hate them... but I dunno, their albums are great. And before you accuse me of being some hipster or something, I'm a dad on the other side of the world who likes Rob Zombie, Royksopp, Oasis and Ryan Adams, so whatever.
Neon Bible was better than Funeral, by the way.
DKinMN
2009-11-05 08:29:56 AM
I'm assuming this was in TFA.
It bothers me quite a bit to see Hornsby mentioned in the same breath as Hootie.
As a composer, arranger, keyboard player, singer, and lyricist, Hornsby very nearly stands alone in terms of sheer talent. Spirit Trail is one of few double albums whose length does not seem self-indulgent and unnecessary. His recent collaboration with Ricky Skaggs was great. With Paul Simon and Peter Gabriel, he is one of the handful of 20th century artists whose output continues to show artistic growth. He is one of few white folks who could be called 'soulful' without stretching the meaning of the word.
I like Grizzly Bear, but you could give them a month to come up with a song, and Hornsby could follow it up with an improvised piece that blows it out of the water.
Link (new window)
Link (new window)
shoegaze99
2009-11-05 09:13:04 AM
The comments weren't made about Arcade Fire, they were made about Neutral Milk Hotel.
breathe: i would go as far as to say ITAOTS would be higher on my list of best 90s albums than nirvana's incredibly polished nevermind would be.
Speaking as a fairly big Nirvana fan, I agree wholeheartedly. In The Aeroplane is a monumental record, one that more than 10 years later still breaks my heart every time I hear it.
OldManDownDRoad
2009-11-05 09:16:23 AM
I saw a show that featured Hornsby and Marc Cohn. Cohn has a voice you have to hear live to believe, and Hornsby's smart enough to keep his playing subtle yet interesting when he's backing someone up. One of the best shows I've ever seen - both of these guys are generally underrated.
thomps
2009-11-05 09:16:26 AM
this article^ made its way around fark a year or so ago. really good look at jeff mangum.
tricycleracer
2009-11-05 09:36:41 AM
jonasborg
2009-11-05 09:39:44 AM
BreadMK
2009-11-05 09:47:10 AM
birdbath
2009-11-05 10:07:50 AM
The Dot And The Line
2009-11-05 10:27:23 AM
this
breathe
2009-11-05 10:43:00 AM
saw this coming a mile away
Ball of Confusion
2009-11-05 11:05:26 AM
barneyfifesbullet
2009-11-05 11:21:34 AM
Hipsters. Shoot them all.
Madbassist1
2009-11-05 11:26:37 AM
How the hell did this guy get a hold of my band's EP?