by Sufjan Stevens » 8/7/2004, 10:53 pm
Well, I figure it's about time to tell you about the album that changed my life, and hopefully will do the same for yours. Or maybe you'll like it. Who knows?
I'm going to tell you kiddies about Neutral Milk Hotel - In The Aeroplane Over The Sea that came out on the wonderful record label, Merge Records.
Back in 1998, Neutral Milk Hotel released "Areoplane..." onto a world that wasn't ready for it. At this time, everything fell into place for Jeff Magnum and crew, where Magnum honed his story-like songwriting, they relied less on the guitar, more on the horns and accordian, and added the use of the fuzz bass to make an amazing sound not heard since the 1960s. The peculiar blend of instruments on this cd and their usage earned this album the tagline "Pet Sound of indie rock." And for those that don't know who made Pet Sounds, it was the Beach Boys.
All sounds aside, the thing that makes this album remarkable is the level Jeff Magnum took the singer-songwriter craft to. Generally, songs just tell stories or are there to make your head bob. Magnum brought some of the most amazing imagery into this album, written partly about Anne Frank and partly about the death of his friend's brother. The way he describes death, life, love, and sex in this album is nothing short of eloquent.
"The King Of Carrot Flowers Pt. 1" opens up the album with just Jeff's emoting voice and his acoustic guitar, soon accompanied by a bagpipe and a saw. "The King Of Carrot Flowers Pt. 2 and 3" have Jeff repeating "I love you Jesus Christ" then kicks into the most rocking song on the album, with crashing drums, fuzz bass, and insane lyrics like "I will float until I learn how to swim, inside my mother, the garbage bin" that seem like nonsense, but in song, fit perfectly with what he is trying to convey.
The album slows down with a more personal, touching song called "In the Aeroplane Over the Sea." This is Jeff's most touching song, going over, life, love, and death, accompanied by the accordian, saw, and acoustic guitar. The album hits the emotions harder with the song "Two-Headed Boy Pt. 1" and picks the pace of the album up a bit. It flows into "The Fool," an absolutely amazing intstumental with marching drums, horns, bass, and every other instrument imaginable.
The album kicks into its only single, "Holland, 1945" which is also another rocking song with heavy fuzz bass, deep drums, and Magnum sharing his beautiful lyrics about his love (Anne Frank) dying. The way he words his emotions is beyond words. The album slows down into the haunting "Communist Daughter" loaded with atmospheric sounds to accomapny Jeff's deep voice and sexually driven lyrics, as in the line, "Sweet communist, the communist daughter, standing on the seaweed water, semen stains the mountaintops, semen stains the mountaintops."
The album kicks into the epic "Oh Comely," a song joining Magnum, his guitar, and his special way of singing about death. This is the song's most touching, yet hard to access, song, mostly because of it's 8 minutes of work. The album flows into my personal favorite, "Ghost," where Jeff sings about the death of his friend's suicide, where he's surrounded with a guitar, drums, and a tuba (yes, I said a tuba), and a section of horns. The album kicks into the last insturmental song, named "Untitled" which is loaded with sounds that I can't describe.
The closing song on the album, "Two-Headed Boy Pt. 2" is the saddest, most touching, and critically accepted as the best song on the album. Jeff closes the album with atmospheric sounds, his guitar, and voice to send off his friend from the persepctive of his friend's father. I'm listening to the song right now, and if you take the time to listen to it, tears will well up in your eyes and it will send chills down your spine. If you've ever experienced the death of someone close to you, this song will hit you in a certain way that makes you appreciate the album in a way you never have appreciated music before.
This was Magnum's final work before he left the country never to record music again. He left the world with quote possibly the best album ever recorded (Yes, I know I just said the best album ever). There has never been an album quite like this before. Not many people are ambitious to mix atmospheric sounds and horns to the singer/songwriter genre. Magnum's imagination practically reinvented the way one writes songs about anything above the tripe a pop singer can muster.
Recommended songs: Well, I reviewed every song on this album, so just pick out the titles and download them. The album is best listened to as a whole piece, but is you need to pick out certain songs, download "The King Of Carrot Flowers pt. 1" "In The Aeroplane Over The Sea" "Holland, 1945" "Oh Comely" "Ghost" and "Two-Headed Boy pt. 2"
If anyone has problems finding these songs, hit me up on AIM. My screen name is "bleedtopleaseyou" and this is the only album I am willing to send to people in its entirety.
Sorry this was so long. I attempted to write about an album beyond words, and this is what happened. The album changed my life, maybe it will do the same to yours.
I faced death. I went in with my arms swinging. But I heard my own breath and had to face that I'm still living. I'm still flesh. I hold on to awful feelings. I'm not dead... My chest still draws breath. I hold it. I'm buoyant. There's no end.