Lambchop - Nixon (Reissue) (2010)

  • 17 Apr, 19:25
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Artist:
Title: Nixon
Year Of Release: 2010
Label: City Slang
Genre: Indie Rock, Alt Country
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 49:46
Total Size: 220/422 Mb (scans)
WebSite:

Lambchop - Nixon (Reissue) (2010)


Tracklist:

01. The Old Gold Shoe (Kurt Wagner) 06:21
02. Grumpus (Kurt Wagner) 04:19
03. You Masculine You (Kurt Wagner) 05:59
04. Up With People (Kurt Wagner) 05:59
05. Nashville Parent (Kurt Wagner) 05:39
06. What Else Could It Be? (Kurt Wagner) 03:39
07. The Distance From Her To There (Kurt Wagner) 04:21
08. The Book I Haven't Read (Curtis Mayfield / Kurt Wagner) 05:44
09. The Petrified Floristv (Kurt Wagner) 04:53
10. The Butcher Boy (trad.) 02:52

Line-up:
John Delworth: hammond b3, rhodes piano, juno
Deanna Varagona: baritone saxophone, backing vocals
Paul Niehaus: pedal steel guitar, fender telecaster guitar, backing vocals
Allen Lowrey: the drums
Jonathan Marx: trumpet, backing vocals
C. Scott Chase: open end wrenches, lacquer thinner can
Marc Trovillion: the bass
Kurt Wagner: vocals, 1946 gibson L7 guitar, juno
Paul Burch, Jr.: vibraphone
Mark Nevers: atmospheric guitar, electric guitar
Dennis Cronin: trumpet, cornet, backing vocals
Alex MaManus: electric guitars
Matt Swanson: bass guitar

Additional musicians:
Tony Crow: piano
Ken Coomer: additional percussion
Matt Bach: bass guitar
Paul Booker: electric guitar
Nashville String Machine: strings
Lloyd Barry: string arrangements
Sanchez: Choir arrangements

Supposedly a concept album about the disgraced 37th president of the United States (though the lyrics make no recognizable statements about Richard Nixon's infamous life and times), Lambchop's fifth full-length was a powerful consolidation of the strengths they'd gained since their uncertain debut in 1994. Kurt Wagner's sometimes singing/ sometimes talking vocal style, and lyrics that were oblique to the point of seeing surreal, remained a matter of taste, but his melodies hit a new peak in their beauty and evocative spirit as he merged countrypolitan country, smooth R&B, and chamber pop in ambitious and intriguing ways.
And as Lambchop swelled to 13 musicians (not counting guest musicians, a choir, and the string section), the arrangements became increasingly sophisticated as Wagner and his collaborators used their rich palette of sounds to inspire a wealth of moods—from the easygoing groove of "Grumpus" to the luxurious sadness of "Nashville Parent"—and helped to clarify and strengthen that which seemed uncertain in Wagner's lyrics. And given the sheer ambition of this album, Nixon is a milestone in independent record making, music constructed on a grand scale that's richly satisfying without seeming overdone or tricked up simply for its own sake. And regardless of how one feels about Wagner's abilities as a singer, when he lets his heart do the talking on numbers like "The Distance from Her to There" and "The Book I Haven't Read," his sincerity is undeniable and affecting. Calling Nixon Lambchop's masterpiece is to ignore the fine work they'd done before, and the similarly ambitious work that came afterward, but it is the point where they showed they were in full command of the tools and talents at their disposal, and its glorious eccentricities are as pleasurable as anything in their catalog.


  • whiskers
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
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Many thanks for lossless.
  • Blaubart 1922
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Many Thanks