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Yellow House

 
Album Review: Yellow House

  • Artist: Grizzly Bear
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 2006
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

On their second album (and Warp debut), Yellow House, Grizzly Bear takes a dramatic leap forward, delivering a collection of songs that sound awe-inspiringly huge and intimate at the same time. While the album is overall more polished and focused than their debut, nowhere is this (literally) clearer than in Yellow House's production. Though the artful lo-fi approach Grizzly Bear used on Horn of Plenty -- which sounded like it was recorded on tapes that had been moldering away in musty cupboards, or gradually dissolving underwater -- was extremely evocative in its own way, Yellow House's warmth, clarity, and symphonic depth gives Grizzly Bear's widescreen psychedelic folk-rock a timelessness that makes it seem even more dreamlike and unique. The album's structure and songwriting are much more focused, too, even though many of the tracks hover around five to six minutes long. Instead of presenting their experiments as fragments and snippets, as they did on Horn of Plenty, on Yellow House Grizzly Bear incorporates their ideas into pieces with natural, suite-like movements. "Central and Remote" moves seamlessly from fragile marimba melodies to acoustic guitar-driven verses and towering choruses. The best moments not only have a natural sound, but conjure up nature imagery as well: "Easier" opens the album with a gently exciting buildup of woodwinds, banjo, and acoustic guitar that could soundtrack the dawn of a late summer morning, while "Colorado" closes Yellow House with wide expanses of vocal harmonies and mountainous tympani. In between, there's more majestic beauty to be found, particularly on the gorgeously hazy love song "Knife," which combines lush Beach Boys harmonies with a little bit of the Velvet Underground's chugging cool. Elsewhere, "Plans" feels like a more brooding take on the High Llamas' intricate, symphonic/electronic pop, while "On a Neck, on a Spit" recalls Jim O'Rourke's freewheeling deconstruction of folk-rock and soft rock. However, these similarities feel more like allegiances than tracing over the work of these artists -- Yellow House is a beautiful album in its own right, and required listening not just for fans of Horn of Plenty, but for anyone who enjoys ambitious, creative music with an emotional undercurrent. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Easier Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (3:43)
Lullabye Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (5:14)
Knife Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (5:14)
Central and Remote Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (4:54)
Little Brother Grizzly Bear, Fred Nicolaus Grizzly Bear (6:24)
Plans Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (4:16)
Marla Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (4:56)
On a Neck, On a Spit Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (5:46)
Reprise Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (3:19)
Colorado Grizzly Bear Grizzly Bear (6:13)

Credits

Chris Coady (Mixing), Owen Pallett (Strings), Owen Pallett (String Arrangements), Christopher Bear (Drums), Christopher Bear (Glockenspiel), Christopher Bear (Vocals), Christopher Bear (Xylophone), Christopher Bear (Lap Steel Guitar), Christopher Bear (Group Member), Edward Droste (Guitar), Edward Droste (Autoharp), Edward Droste (Keyboards), Edward Droste (Vocals), Edward Droste (Group Member), Patryce Bak (Photography), Daniel Rossen (Banjo), Daniel Rossen (Guitar), Daniel Rossen (Piano), Daniel Rossen (Autoharp), Daniel Rossen (Vocals), Daniel Rossen (Group Member), John Marshman (Strings), Ben Tousley (Design), Chris Taylor (Bass), Chris Taylor (Clarinet), Chris Taylor (Flute), Chris Taylor (Keyboards), Chris Taylor (Saxophone), Chris Taylor (Vocals), Chris Taylor (Producer), Chris Taylor (Engineer), Chris Taylor (Mixing), Chris Taylor (Electronics), Chris Taylor (Treatments), G. Lucas Crane (Tape)
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Wikipedia: Yellow House (album)
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Yellow House
Studio album by Grizzly Bear
Released September 5, 2006
Recorded 2005-2006
Genre Psych Folk
Length 50:00
Label Warp
Producer Grizzly Bear
Professional reviews
Grizzly Bear chronology
Sorry for the Delay
(2006)
Yellow House
(2006)
Friend (EP)
(2007)

Yellow House is the second studio album by indie rock band Grizzly Bear, released on September 5, 2006 on Warp Records. The album's title is in reference to vocalist Ed Droste's mother's house where a majority of the recording took place. Droste and bandmate Chris Taylor suggest that: "there is not really a theme with the lyrics but the theme of the album is us figuring out how to work together and recording in that house, which is what brought it together in that weird way."[1]

The album received critical acclaim from several major publications, and ranked #8 in Pitchfork Media's best albums of 2006 list, as well as a similarly high placement in the same list of the New York Times. The music webzine Tiny Mix Tapes ranked Yellow House #7 on the Top 25 Albums of 2006. It currently holds a score of 79 at aggregate critic review site, MetaCritic.[2]

The first single, "Knife," was only released on 7" picture disc vinyl with the exclusive B-side "Easier" (alternate edit) on May 21, 2007. A music video for "Knife" was produced by Encyclopedia Pictura in 2007. A music video for "Central and Remote," directed by Jesse Ewles, was also released in 2007.

In 2009 the Warp20 (Recreated) compilation featured a cover of "Colorado" by Pivot and "Little Brother" by Jamie Lidell.

Contents

Writing and recording process

Many of the demos for the album were what the band refers to as "sketches," done by mostly singer/guitarists Daniel Rossen and Ed Droste. "Marla" itself is actually a song written by Droste's great aunt, a failed musician. As he explained in an interview with Pitchfork Media:

Well, the whole "Marla" story of my great aunt being this failed musician that dies at an early age in the 1940s was, basically, I got this CD a few years ago from the last remaining sibling of hers, who had finally decided to transfer this stuff to disc. For me, this was the one song. Much in the way that I kind look at the "Owner of a Lonely Heart" thing-- even though that was just myself-- and see this melancholic, slower edge that I heard in it. Not that it was exactly the same because this was obviously the four of us working on it, but I took the song and said, "Look everybody, I'm not sure how we'll do this, but it will be really cool if we slowed it down and tried to give it our own spin." Luckily, everyone was really into it, but it was very much a blank page for a few days.

As Horn of Plenty was a solo effort by Droste, this record is truly the band's "debut" as it features all members contributing to the writing and production of the album. Recordings took place throughout July 2005 and then, according to the band, went through six or seven months of post-production and mastering.

Reception

Online music magazine Pitchfork placed Yellow House at number 95 on their list of top 200 albums of the 2000s.[3]

Tracklisting

# Title Length
1. "Easier"   3:43
2. "Lullabye"   5:14
3. "Knife"   5:14
4. "Central and Remote"   4:54
5. "Little Brother"   6:24
6. "Plans"   4:16
7. "Marla"   4:56
8. "On a Neck, on a Spit"   5:46
9. "Reprise"   3:19
10. "Colorado"   6:14

Personnel

The following people contributed to Yellow House:[4]

Band

Additional musicians

  • G. Lucas Crane - tapes ("Plans")
  • Owen Pallett - strings, string arrangements ("Marla")
  • John Marshman - strings ("Marla")

Recording personnel

  • Chris Taylor – producer, recording, mixing
  • Chris Coady - mixing

Artwork

  • Patryce Bak - photography
  • Ben Tousley - design

Song appearances

"Reprise," "Little Brother," "On a Neck, On a Spit," "Central and Remote", and "Easier" are used as background music on several of Adult Swim's bumps. "On a Neck, On a Spit" was featured on The CW show Reaper.

References

External links


 
 

 

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 "Yellow House (album)" Read more