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Hazards of Love

The Decemberists

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Album Review

King Decemberist Colin Meloy's love for the heydays of British folk-rock has always served as the foundation on which he builds his crafty, idiosyncratic chamber pop, but on Hazards of Love he's taken that bedrock and built his own version of Stonehenge. A 17-song suite (think one continuous song with track ID's peppered throughout for sanity's sake) about a girl named Margaret, shapeshifters, forest queens, and fairytale treachery, Hazards of Love is ambitious, pretentious, obtuse, often impenetrable, and altogether pretty great. Harking back to the late-'60s/early-'70s offerings from bands like Pentangle, Horslips, ELP, Steeleye Span, and the Incredible String Band, it makes no apologies for its nerdy, prog rock musicality, and convoluted narrative. Meloy, who often cites Shirley Collins, Nic Jones, and Anne Briggs as influences — Hazards is named after a Briggs' EP which featured no such song — must have had a vast hard rock/power metal collection to draw from as well, as one can glean melodic cues and structures from Iron Maiden and Rush as easily as they can Fairport Convention and Jethro Tull. On a record with no obvious single (the first instance of the title track comes the closest), it's the album as a whole that needs to engage, and for the most part, the Decemberists have succeeded. The inclusion of guest vocalists Becky Stark (Lavender Diamond) and Shara Worden (My Brightest Diamond), who bring some Little Queen-era Heart to the table, as well as bit parts from Jim James (My Morning Jacket), Rebecca Gates (Spinanes), and Robyn Hitchcock help keep the focus off Meloy's affected vocals, but it's the music that drives this beast into the forest. Producer Tucker Martine has beefed up the band's sound even more than he did with Christopher Walla on 2006's Crane Wife, channeling more reverb into the acoustics and a whole lot more brimstone into the electrics, resulting in what is easily the band's best sounding record to date. Hazards of Love won't convert anybody who already wrote the band off as overly precious bookworms with a Morrissey/Victorian ghost story fetish, but fans who have dutifully followed the Decemberists since their 2002 debut get to take home bragging rights this time around.

Customer Reviews

Pure Magic

After a few years of waiting the world finally has a wonderful new Concept album to love for years to come.

Grows and grows

It's perhaps not as immediately accessible as their last album, both musically and lyrically, but this album grows and grows on you until it's in your head all the time. In terms of musical style there is more of a rock undercurrent than before, a fuller band sound, and greater female lead vocals. While immediately identifiable as The Decemberists, the style is different enough from their previous works for this album to justify its own place on the shelf. Colin Meloy and the band have kept the creativity and freshness going. Figuring out all the lyrics and hence the progress of the tale is a task I am still working through... If you like The Decemberists you'll love Hazards of Love. Highly recommended.

Charming and challenging - never boring

This is the kind of album which takes a while to understand, but you won't be bored while you figure it out, and you'll have the pleasure of listening to wonderful musicians and vocalists while you do it. Intelligent and beautiful, dark and enthralling, and a bunch of adjectives I haven't yet considered. A midsummer's night dream of an album.

Biography

Formed: 2000 in Portland, OR

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Led by Montana native Colin Meloy, the Decemberists craft theatrical, hyper-literate pop songs that draw heavily from late-'60s British folk acts like Fairport Convention and Pentangle and the early-'80s college rock grandeur of the Waterboys and R.E.M. The band's initial lineup also included drummer Ezra Holbrook, bassist Nate Query, keyboardist/accordionist Jenny Conlee, and multi-instrumentalist Chris Funk. Frontman Meloy had previously devoted some time to an alternative country group before...
Full Bio
Hazards of Love, The Decemberists
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  • $9.99
  • Genres: Pop, Music, Pop/Rock, Alternative, Indie Rock, Rock, Adult Alternative
  • Released: 13 March 2009

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