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Marigolds

 
Album Review: Marigolds

  • Artist: The Veldt
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1992 01
  • Total Time: 21:48
  • Type: Extended Play (EP)
  • Genre: Rock

Review

A fine EP, Marigolds has plenty to offer in its 20 minutes. It sounds like the band is brimming with ideas, making one wonder why the Veldt weren't able to deliver another handful of songs to make a full album. "CCCP" is blissed-out pop with plenty of kick. The voice of Daniel Chavis is powerful and emotive, placed well in the mix. "She Stoops to Conquer" is crunchier, mainly due to nasty riffing from his brother Danny. The Veldt might have been cut from the same cloth as many of the United Kingdom's shoegazer bands, but his voice blows out most of his contemporaries, having more than enough range and skill to de-necessitate burial in guitars. Some might find their ears at odds with engineer A.R. Kane, bassist Moose, and Lincoln Fong's drum-heavy production, but others will just find that it provides a nice sense of immediacy. (Fong also provides bass here.) Besides, hard-hitting percussion gives it a hip-hop edge, a notion brought further to light in the sample-based incidental interludes. As with the following Afrodisiac, swipe this one up if you spot it in a used bin. Any fan of Kitchens of Distinction or A.R. Kane will be pleased and ultimately shocked that such a band would flounder in such degenerate obscurity. There isn't a weak moment here. Dig the nod to Love on the cover. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
CCCP The Veldt The Veldt (3:33)
She Stoops to Conquer The Veldt The Veldt (3:07)
[See Insert] The Veldt The Veldt (:29)
Pleasure Toy The Veldt The Veldt (2:51)
Tinsel Town The Veldt The Veldt (2:46)
[See Insert] The Veldt The Veldt (:35)
Chanteuse The Veldt The Veldt (3:10)
Willow Tree The Veldt The Veldt (4:28)
Reprise The Veldt The Veldt (:49)

Credits

Daniel Chavis (Guitar), Daniel Chavis (Vocals), Suzanne Dyer (Assistant Engineer), Lincoln Fong (Bass), Lincoln Fong (Producer), Lincoln Fong (Engineer), Lincoln Fong (Mixing), Rich July (Assistant Engineer), Howie Weinberg (Mastering), Michael Bays (Art Direction), Klotz (Design), Brad Brandaritz-Schmidt (Assistant Engineer), Martin Levi (Drums), The Veldt (Arranger), The Veldt (Main Performer), The Veldt (Mixing), The Veldt (Cover Design)
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Wikipedia: Marigolds (short story)
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"Marigolds" is a short story that is written by Eugenia Collier in 1969. She reports that she wrote the story during a time in which she was quite unhappy. However, she won the Gwendolyn Brooks Prize for Fiction for it, and she now considers Marigolds her favorite piece of fiction. It has been widely anthologized and is now used in many secondary school English classes. It is an account of an incident during the adolescence of a young African-American girl, Lizabeth, growing up in rural Maryland during the Great Depression. "Marigolds" is not autobiographical; explains that her adolescence was much easier than that of the story's narrator.

Plot summary

Lizabeth, the tomboyish main character, narrator and protagonist, tells this story from her childhood. The leader of her group of friends, Lizabeth takes part in throwing stones at Miss Lottie's flowerbed of marigolds. Miss Lottie is the town outcast, and frustrating her is a common pastime for the children of the town. In their Depression-era town, her marigolds are described as one of the only spots of amazing vibrant colors. They and Miss Lottie seems to confuse and amuse the children at the same time. Later that evening, Lizabeth overhears her unemployed father sobbing to his wife of his frustration and anger in not being able to provide for his family. Never has she heard her father cry. Never has she considered the vulnerabilities of adults. As she wrestles with the fear and anger over their difficult situation, Lizabeth cannot sleep and, in the middle of the night, returns to Miss Lottie's flowerbed. There in the darkness she unleashes her fury on the marigolds, trampling them and uprooting them from the ground. When Ms. Lottie sees that, Lizabeth has nothing to say but stare at what a thing she has done. As her rage and sadness runs its course, she looks up to see an equally devastated Miss Lottie standing over her. She then understands the difference between childhood and maturity and one cannot have both compassion and innocence in them. It is at this moment that Lizabeth sees with the eyes of adulthood, with eyes of compassion, and she knows that the innocence of her childhood is gone forever.


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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 "Marigolds (short story)" Read more