The Decemberists - The King Is Dead (2011)
Artist: The Decemberists
Title: The King Is Dead
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Rough Trade
Genre: Indie Folk, Indie Rock
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:40:40
Total Size: 281 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: The King Is Dead
Year Of Release: 2011
Label: Rough Trade
Genre: Indie Folk, Indie Rock
Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
Total Time: 00:40:40
Total Size: 281 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Don't Carry It All
02. Calamity Song
03. Rise To Me
04. Rox In The Box
05. January Hymn
06. Down by the Water
07. All Arise!
08. June Hymn
09. This Is Why We Fight
10. Dear Avery
The Decemberists' sixth, full-length studio outing finds the Portland, Oregon-based indie rock collective exploring a region that has thus far eluded them. Raised on a steady diet of Morrissey, Robyn Hitchcock, Shirley Collins, and Fairport Convention, The King Is Dead represents frontman Colin Meloy's first foray into the musical traditions of his homeland, or more specifically, it proves that he really, really likes R.E.M. “Calamity Song,” which is one of three tracks to feature guitar work from Peter Buck, threatens to break into “Pretty Persuasion” or “So. Central Rain (I’m Sorry)” at any moment, and first single “Down by the Water” flirts with “The One I Love” hard enough to take it on a long weekend, though Meloy has stated that the track “started out as more of a paean to R.E.M. than I think any of us really wanted it to.” David Rawlings and Gillian Welch also join the party on a number of tracks, lending their instantly recognizable voices to two of the album’s finest moments, the Wildflowers-era, Tom Petty-inspired “Don’t Carry It All,” and the lovely, Paul Simon-esque “June Hymn” - Meloy and Welch, the former a Montana-born Anglophile and the latter a California girl with a fetish for dustbowl Appalachia - harmonize nicely, canceling out each other’s vocal affectations. It’s a refreshing change from the usual compilation of bibliophile, sea shanty/murder ballad, and while the Led Zeppelin III-style rural overhauling may isolate fans who prefer the serpentine, progressive, art rock of albums like The Crane Wife and Hazards of Love, it opens up a whole new continent for the band to explore.