Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

It's a Wonderful Life

 
Album Review: It's a Wonderful Life

  • Artist: Sparklehorse
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: July 03, 2001
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Along with the Flaming Lips and Mercury Rev, Sparklehorse crafts strangely beautiful -- and beautifully strange -- music inspired by down-to-earth sounds as well as spacey experimentalism. But where the Lips are lovably loopy and Mercury Rev is arty and wry, Sparklehorse wraps deep-seated, often uncomfortable emotions in layers of metaphors and static. However, the group's third album, It's a Wonderful Life, is its most open and direct work yet. Whether this has anything to do with the fact that this is reportedly singer/songwriter Mark Linkous' first substance-free work is arguable, but regardless, it's a noticeably more focused effort. Though it lacks Good Morning Spider's sprawling brilliance, it's possibly Linkous' most effective, and affecting, collection of songs. It's also his most collaborative album, with co-producer and Mercury Rev alum David Fridmann adding just the right amount of warmth and weirdness and the Cardigans' Nina Persson and PJ Harvey contributing backing vocals that rival their work on Gran Turismo and Stories From the City, Stories From the Sea. Persson's sweetly empathetic voice shines on "Gold Day" and "Little Fat Baby," while Harvey's passionate style fits "Piano Fire" and the brooding ballad "Eyepennies" perfectly. Driven by burbling keyboards, drum machines, acoustic guitar, and piano, and populated with spooky, homespun images of babies, teeth, nails, and horses, most of the album consists of gently unsettling ballads like the title track and "Apple Bed." Edgier, poppier songs like "King of Nails" and "Comfort Me" don't sound out of place, but the stomping, clunky, Tom Waits-lite of "Dog Door," which actually features Waits on lead vocals, is a distraction. The album's sweet, yet too strange to be conventionally uplifting songs like "More Yellow Birds" and "Babies on the Sun" convey It's a Wonderful Life's message best: Even at its weirdest, just being alive is pretty wonderful. Needless to say, so is the album. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
It's a Wonderful Life (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (2:59)
Gold Day (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (4:14)
Piano Fire (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (2:43)
Sea of Teeth (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (4:29)
Apple Bed (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (4:54)
King of Nails (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (4:18)
Eyepennies (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (5:27)
Dog Door Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (2:46)
More Yellow Birds (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (4:53)
Little Fat Baby (Lyrics) Vic Chesnutt, Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (3:40)
Devil's New (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (3:32)
Comfort Me (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (5:01)
Babies on the Sun (Lyrics) Mark Linkous Sparklehorse (4:37)

Credits

Mark Linkous (Shortwave Radio), Margaret White (Violin), Dave Fridmann (Piano), Margaret White (Bass), Mark Linkous (Guitar (Acoustic)), Dave Fridmann (Producer), Dave Fridmann (Wurlitzer), Mark Linkous (Casio), Mark Linkous (Prophet 5), Mark Linkous (Sampling), Mark Linkous (Guitar), Alan Weatherhead (Chamberlin), Jane Scarpantoni (Cello), Dan Estabrook (Photography), Scott Minor (Percussion), Dan Estabrook (Design), Nina Persson (Vocals), Joan Wasser (Violin), Dave Fridmann (Mellotron), Mark Linkous (Percussion), Scott Minor (Electronics), Scott Minor (Orchestration), Scott Minor (Drums), Joel Hamilton (Engineer), Greg Calbi (Mastering), Alan Weatherhead (Mellotron), Alan Weatherhead (Lap Steel Guitar), Adrian Utley (Bass), Dave Fridmann (Glockenspiel), John Parish (Producer), Dave Fridmann (Mixing), Mark Linkous (Orchestration), Mark Linkous (Moog Synthesizer), Scott Minor (Korg Synthesizer), Mark Linkous (Optigan), Mark Linkous (Wurlitzer), John Parish (Bass), Miguel Rodriguez (Drums), John Parish (Mixing), Mark Linkous (Drum Machine), Dave Fridmann (Bass), Tom Waits (Sounds), Dave Fridmann (Engineer), Scott Minor (Chamberlin), Adrian Utley (Dictaphone), Mark Linkous (Vocals), Bob Rupe (Bass), Mark Linkous (Engineer), Joan Wasser (Wurlitzer), Alan Weatherhead (Orchestration), Mark Linkous (Producer), Mark Linkous (Mellotron), Mark Linkous (Mixing), Mark Linkous (Chamberlin), John Parish (Casio)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: It's a Wonderful Life (album)
Top
It's a Wonderful Life
Studio album by Sparklehorse
Released August 8, 2001
Recorded 2000–2001
Genre Alternative rock
lo-fi music
Length 61:06
Label Capitol/EMI Records
7243 5 34709 2 0
C2-34709
Producer Mark Linkous
Dave Fridmann
John Parish
Professional reviews
Sparklehorse chronology
Good Morning Spider
(1999)
It's a Wonderful Life
(2001)
Dreamt for Light Years in the Belly of a Mountain
(2006)

It's a Wonderful Life is the third album by Virginian indie rock group Sparklehorse, released in 2001. The album features appearances by Tom Waits, PJ Harvey, John Parish, Nina Persson, Vic Chesnutt, and Dave Fridmann.

Contents

Track listing

All tracks by Mark Linkous except where stated.

  1. "It's a Wonderful Life"—2:59
  2. "Gold Day"—4:14
  3. "Piano Fire"—2:43
  4. "Sea of Teeth"—4:29
  5. "Apple Bed"—4:54
  6. "King of Nails"—4:18
  7. "Eyepennies"—5:27
  8. "Dog Door" (Brennan/Linkous/Waits)—2:46
  9. "More Yellow Birds"—4:53
  10. "Little Fat Baby" (Chesnutt/Linkous)—3:40
  11. "Devil's New"—3:32
    • Excluded from European release.
  12. "Comfort Me"—5:01
  13. "Babies on the Sun"—4:37
  14. "Morning Hollow" [hidden track]—7:26

Recording history

Mark Linkous recorded his first two albums, Good Morning Spider and Vivadixesubmarinetransmissionplot, in a small room inside his Virginia farm. There he worked by himself, providing all of the instrumentation and vocals for those albums. It’s a Wonderful Life was the first Sparklehorse outing in which Mark Linkous did not perform alone in his private studio. Linkous was afraid that working in solitude for his third album would stifle his creativity and prevent him from delving into new musical territory. He believed he could achieve artistic growth by working with other members of the music business. “I didn't want to play every instrument on every song,” said Linkous, in an interview with Free Williamsburg Online Magazine. “I didn't want to be behind the control console the whole time. I wanted to have other people's brains and input involved.”

Linkous played with a full band while recording It’s a Wonderful Life. He also worked with a wide array of guest musicians, which included PJ Harvey and Tom Waits. Linkous was reportedly incredibly nervous about contacting Waits. According to Guardian.co.uk,[citation needed] Linkous had to take five shots of whiskey before gaining the courage to call the famous singer-songwriter. During the phone call, the two men planned a meeting in California. The meeting was quite unusual and took place inside an SUV as the two men rode down a California highway. Within the car they discussed possible album ideas, their least-favorite animals, and their mutual disgust for turkey vultures. Waits went on to record the song “Dog Door” with Linkous on the album.

It’s a Wonderful Life was recorded years after Linkous’s near-fatal overdose from heroin, anti-depressants, and alcohol in a London hotel room. The incident received a large amount of media coverage and was documented within several music magazines, including Rolling Stone and Spin. Linkous frequently had to answer questions about his overdose during interviews. He was also chastised by some critics for the exceedingly somber themes in his work. The album’s title track is a melancholy ode to the beauties of life. The chorus has Linkous faintly whispering, “It’s a wonderful life,” over and over, on top of lush orchestration in addition to looping electronic textures. Linkous declares the song is a fuck-you to journalists who can’t forget about his brush with death, or see the beauty hidden within his songs.

All of the album's songs were made into music videos by various filmmakers, such as the Quay Brothers, Garine Torossian, Michele Civetta, Grant Gee, and Guy Maddin, which became the subject of the October 26, 2001, episode of the Sundance Channel series Sonic Cinema.[1]

Personnel

  • Mark Linkous—Voice (1–7, 9, 10, 12–14), optigan (1, 2, 6, 8, 12, 13), chamberlin (1, 2), sampler (1, 4, 5, 8), guitar (2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12), Wurlitzer piano (2), percussion (2), acoustic guitar (3), Casio keyboard (3), mellotron (4, 13), drum machine (5, 12), Prophet 5 synthesizer (6, 12), drums (8), backwards midget voice (8), Magic Genie organ (9), Moog synthesizer (12, 13), wire recorder (13), baritone guitar (14), e-bow guitar (14)
  • Dave Fridmann—bass (2, 4, 12), Wurlitzer piano (2, 14), mellotron (2), piano (4, 12), chamberlin (12, 13), glockenspiel (13), vibraphone (14)
  • Polly Jean Harvey—voice (3, 7), electric guitar (3), piano (3), guitar (7)
  • Sophie Michalitsianos—Voice (6, 10, 12–14), bass (6)
  • Scott Minor—Drums (2–4, 6, 7, 10, 12, 14), orchestron (2), electronic birds (2), electronics (3, 5, 12, 13), Russian satellite (4), chamberlin (4), filtered drums (5), percussion (6, 12), Korg MS-20 keyboard (12), harmonium (14)
  • John Parish—bass (3), Casio keyboard (3), piano (7)
  • Nina Persson—voice (2, 5)
  • Miguel Rodriguez—drums (9)
  • Bob Rupe—bass (5, 10)
  • Jane Scarpantoni—cello (5, 10, 14)
  • Adrian Utley—Dictaphone (2), bass (7), Kitty-Cat guitar (8), fuzzy-ending bass (8)
  • Tom Waits—voice (8), big seed pod (8), metal things (8), train (8), piano (14)
  • Joan Wasser—violin (5, 10, 14), Wurlitzer piano (10)
  • Alan Weatherhead—orchestron (9), mellotron (9), chamberlin (9), lap steel guitar (9)
  • Margaret White—bass (9), violin (9)
  • Rex L. White—pedal-steel guitar (12)

References

  1. ^ "Sparklehorse Goes Sonic." Retrieved from Rollingstone.com on March 17, 2008.

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "It's a Wonderful Life (album)" Read more