Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle
Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Unsubst-infobox". Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle is the debut studio album by the American band the Olivia Tremor Control, released on August 6, 1996, by Flydaddy Records. It is an eclectic album that encompasses a variety of genres, including indie pop, neo-psychedelia, and psychedelic pop. The Olivia Tremor Control were influenced by bands of 1960s and 1970s, such as the Beach Boys and the Beatles, as well as experimental musicians like John Cage. Dusk at Cubist Castle purports to be the soundtrack to an unfinished film, and the lyrics focus on surrealist imagery.
The Olivia Tremor Control was formed in Athens, Georgia, and the line-up comprised Bill Doss, Will Cullen Hart, Eric Harris, and John Fernandes. Doss and Hart had been writing songs for a studio album as early as 1993, and Dusk at Cubist Castle was recorded at Pet Sounds Studio in Denver, Colorado. Childhood friend Robert Schneider served as the producer, and the recording sessions featured several other musicians, including Jeff Mangum and Julian Koster. Dusk at Cubist Castle received positive reviews from critics, and Pitchfork ranked it as one of the best albums of the 1990s.
Background and recording
The Olivia Tremor Control originated as a psychedelic band called Cranberry Lifecycle.Template:Sfn This band was formed in Ruston, Louisiana in the late 1980s, by high school friends Will Cullen Hart and Jeff Mangum.Template:Sfn After graduating from high school, the two moved to Athens, Georgia, and reworked Cranberry Lifecycle songs under the name Synthetic Flying Machine.Template:Sfn Fellow Rustonian Bill Doss joined in 1993, and the lineup consisted of Hart on electric guitar, Doss on bass guitar, and Mangum on drums. The band gained a small following due in part to the psychedelic-infused music, which differed from the prevalent grunge sound in the city.Template:Sfn Mangum left the group shortly after its formation, as he wanted to focus on a solo project that would eventually become Neutral Milk Hotel.Template:Sfn Doss and Hart then decided to rename the group to the Olivia Tremor Control.Template:Sfn Mangum suggested the name, which was intended to be a surreal sounding phrase with no further meaning.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
After the release of the first Olivia Tremor Control extended play —California Demise–in 1994, Hart moved to Denver, while Doss moved to New York City to play in the band Chocolate USA.Template:Sfn By 1996, Doss was losing interest in Chocolate USA, and wanted to record more music with Hart. The two reconvened in Athens, and recruited multi-instrumentalists John Fernandes and Eric Harris.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn With this lineup, the Olivia Tremor Control went to Denver to record their first studio album. Robert Schneider, a childhood friend of Doss and Hart, served as the producer, and the album was recorded at Pet Sounds Studio.Template:Sfn
Doss and Hart had been recording songs on 4-track tapes for a studio album as early as 1993.Template:Sfn Doss' ideas were more pop friendly while Hart wrote more experimental songs.Template:Sfn Their dichotomous partnership during this era drew some comparisons to Lennon–McCartney of the Beatles, although Stereogum noted that both Fernandes and Harris retained creative input.Template:Sfn Schneider played on several songs, and other musicians like Jeff Mangum and Julian Koster also contributed. Hart noted that the recording sessions were busy, and estimated that at least eight people played guitar on the song "The Opera House."Template:Sfn
Composition
Dusk at Cubist Castle is a 74 minute double album comprising 27 songs.Template:Sfn Critics have described Dusk at Cubist Castle as an eclectic album that encompasses a variety of genres, including indie pop, neo-psychedelia, and psychedelic pop.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Jason Ankeny of AllMusic also notes the influence of other genres, such as krautrock, noise music, and folk rock.Template:Sfn While discussing the music as a whole, Stereogum described Dusk at Cubist Castle as a "maximalist analog production, sonically distended with so many different ideas that it sounds a little different every time you hear it."Template:Sfn The album purports to be the soundtrack to an unfinished film titled Dusk at Cubist Castle. However, no such film ever existed.Template:Sfn
Some critics have found the first half of Dusk at Cubist Castle to be the more immediate and easily accessible than the rest of the album.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Zachary Houle of PopMatters describes these songs as "Beach Boys meets late-period Beatles in its take on psychedelica".Template:Sfn "Jumping Fences" and "Define a Transparent Dream" are among the more notable songs that are indebted to 1960s and 1970s bands.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Houle compares "Jumping Fences" to a lost Badfinger song, while "Define a Transparent Dream" is reminiscent of David Bowie's "Changes."Template:Sfn Paul Thompson of Pitchfork does note that while the Olivia Tremor Control are heavily influenced by these bands, they interpose their songs with what he describes as: "weird left turns, with hooks that seem to bubble out of nowhere before receding into themselves."Template:Sfn
The second half of the album features more experimental songs, influenced by drone music and musique concrète.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn When asked about the inclusion of these experimental songs, Fernandes said: "We wanted to change the way people listen to music ... Make people who love the Beatles also appreciate John Cage."Template:Sfn An example of this experimentation is the suite of ten consecutive songs all titled "Green Typewriters".Template:Sfn The eighth song in the suite is nearly ten minutes, and is a drone piece that features the sound of standing bells, typewriter keys, passing cars, and dripping water.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The album's title track is a similar drone piece, which Houle compared to the music of a haunted house.Template:Sfn Houle does note that not every song on the second half of the album is experimental, and highlights the final song "NYC-25" as a "jaunty country rock number that leaves an aftertaste of the Beatles yet again."Template:Sfn
Dusk at Cubist Castle focuses on surrealist imagery, in particular dreams.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hart described the album as "dream music for your mind."Template:Sfn Thompson identifies the opening song "The Opera House" as an example of lyrical surrealism, as it mentions going to the movie theater to simply watch the actors move their mouths.Template:Sfn Other topics found throughout the album include a dream that features model headshots of Gertrude Stein, and a cosmonaut who is too transfixed on the thoughts in his mind to speak.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Many of the lyrics found throughout Dusk at Cubist Castle are sincere and happy, which Stereogum noted was different from the prevailing ethos of 1990s indie music, which focused on disillusionment and irony.Template:Sfn In a 1997 interview, Doss said he wanted the Olivia Tremor Control's music to instill a sense of "mystery or happiness" in listeners. "I'm sending out a positive message, because the world needs it ... We're reaching for something that's hard to explain."Template:Sfn
Release and reception
Dusk at Cubist Castle was released on August 6, 1996, by Flydaddy Records.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Early CD pressings included a second album titled Explanation II: Instrumental Themes and Dream Sequences.Template:Sfn This album contains nine ambient songs, and in the liner notes it is suggested to play the two albums in synchronicity, as this would create quadraphonic sound.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The songs "The Opera House" and "Jumping Fences" were released as singles.Template:Sfn To promote the album, the Olivia Tremor Control served as an opener for Beck, and toured with Gorky's Zygotic Mynci in 1998.Template:Sfn Keyboardist Peter Erchick was brought on as the fifth band member while on tour.Template:Sfn
In a contemporary review of Dusk at Cubist Castle for NME, Tom Cox called the Olivia Tremor Control "experts at combining the absurd with the uplifting."Template:Sfn Alternative Press praised the band's "perfect hooks and strong, melodic singing",Template:Sfn while Jason Cohen of The Austin Chronicle remarked that, with the exception of the "random bursts and transient noise" of "Green Typewriters", Dusk at Cubist Castle is "an embarrassment of pop riches, a mildly psychedelic, lavishly melodic quasi-masterpiece."Template:Sfn Spin reviewer Chuck Stephens gave qualified praise, crediting the group for avoiding "parodic excess or overproduced pabulum" but much preferring the album's "silly pop songs", opining that "when OTC stop shakingTemplate:Nbsp... the mind candy starts to melt."Template:Sfn QTemplate:'s Johnny Black found the album largely derivative of 1960s acts such as the Beach Boys and the Beatles, though overall successful at reinterpreting their sounds "through a '90s filter".Template:Sfn The album ranked at number 37 in The Village VoiceTemplate:'s year-end Pazz & Jop critics' poll.Template:Sfn
Writing in retrospect for Pitchfork, Paul Thompson lauded Dusk at Cubist Custle as a "stately, sumptuous, and slightly otherworldly" album "brimming with immaculate hooks and queries bound for the cosmos".Template:Sfn In 2003, it was ranked at number 39 on the website's list of the best albums of the 1990s.Template:Sfn In the 2004 Rolling Stone Album Guide, Roni Sarig stated that despite "a serious need for editing", the album stands as the Olivia Tremor Control's "most cohesive recording, revealing a band clearly capable of creating solid retro-pop songs."Template:Sfn Jason Ankeny, in his review for AllMusic, likened it to the Beatles' 1968 self-titled album in sound and "unfettered creativity", dubbing it "an incredible facsimile".Template:Sfn Tiny Mix Tapes said that while Dusk at Cubist Candle draws "unabashedlyTemplate:Nbsp... from obvious sources", its primary strength "lies not in inventiveness or experimentation (which is not to say it lacks any), but in its ability to strike a dear balance between the temptation of emulating the artists so highly revered, and the exigency and essential need to forge a new sound."Template:Sfn
Track listing
All songs written by The Olivia Tremor Control.
- "The Opera House" – 3:12
- "Frosted Ambassador" – 1:02
- "Jumping Fences" – 1:52
- "Define a Transparent Dream" – 2:49
- "No Growing (Exegesis)" – 3:00
- "Holiday Surprise 1, 2, 3" – 6:11
- "Courtyard" – 2:57
- "Memories of Jacqueline 1906" – 2:15
- "Tropical Bells" – 1:40
- "Can You Come Down with Us?" – 2:18
- "Marking Time" – 4:28
- "Green Typewriters" – 2:22
- "Green Typewriters" – 0:24
- "Green Typewriters" – 0:59
- "Green Typewriters" – 2:11
- "Green Typewriters" – 1:10
- "Green Typewriters" – 0:38
- "Green Typewriters" – 1:38
- "Green Typewriters" – 9:39
- "Green Typewriters" – 1:21
- "Green Typewriters" – 2:39
- "Spring Succeeds" – 2:25
- "Theme for a Very Delicious Grand Piano" – 0:57
- "I Can Smell the Leaves" – 1:50
- "Dusk at Cubist Castle" – 7:35
- "The Gravity Car" – 1:45
- "NYC-25" – 4:39
Personnel
Instrumentation, vocals and production by The Olivia Tremor Control:
- Bill Doss – instrumentation, vocals, production, artwork and design
- W. Cullen Hart – instrumentation, vocals, production, artwork and design
- Eric Harris – instrumentation, vocals, production
- John Fernandes – instrumentation, vocals, production
Additional instrumentation and production by The Elephant 6 Orchestra:
- Robert Schneider – Tibetan prayer bowl, bass,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". vocals, melodica, co-production, engineering
- Jeff Mangum – chanter pipe, slide guitar, vocals, melodica, piano and space bubbles
- Julian Koster – bowed electric guitar, mallet struck acoustic guitar and the singing saw
- Steve Jacobek – trumpet
- Rick Benjamin – trombone
Notes
Footnotes
References
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