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Present 'Picaresque'

The Decemberists

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Album Review

"The Infanta," the thunderous opening track on the Decemberists' fluid and predictably studious Picaresque, rolls in like a ghost ship at 40 knots in a hail of cannon fire with a mad English professor at the wheel. Colin Meloy and his esteemed West Coast colleagues have no qualms about beginning their third full-length record with a processional about a child monarch, and it's a testimony to their talents as orators and interpreters of both the absurd and the mundane that they continue to assimilate more fans than they alienate. While Picaresque follows its predecessor's — the treacly Her Majesty — predilection for seafaring and mythology, its boot-covered feet are more firmly planted in the present, resulting in the group's most accessible — and decidedly upbeat — product to date. The rollicking "16 Military Wives," the aforementioned "Infanta," and "The Sporting Live" (which comes dangerously close to Belle & Sebastian's "Stars of Track and Field") help balance the spooky atmospherics of more reserved cuts like "From My Own True Love (Lost at Sea)" and "Eli, the Barrow Boy." The Decemberists have always excelled at midtempo British folk-inspired dream pop, and Picaresque is no exception, as the brooding "We Both Go Down Together," which sounds like a mist-drenched Pacific Northwest rendering of R.E.M.'s "Losing My Religion," and the wistful "Engine Driver" rank among the group's finest offerings. The album concludes with the diabolical "Mariner's Revenge Song," a Tin Pan Alley dirge/operetta reminiscent of Kurt Weill's "The Black Freighter," and the brief but intoxicating "Of Angels and Angles," a solo Meloy ballad celebrating the holy trinity of nautical lore: love, drowning, and death.

Customer Reviews

What a fantastic album!

Fantastic album. Colin Meloy is a star. Personal favourites are The Engine Driver and On The Bus Mall. But also like Infanta and 16 Military Wives. Overall, not quite as strong an album as Picaresque (new fans start there) but some fantastic tracks.

genius

My new favourite band! cant stop listening to this album, downloaded it after seeing them perform the Rake on Jools Holland Show, then bought the back catalogue on the strength of it.
Intelligent music but not up its own backside, takes a listen or two just to listen to the epic story, but the quality of production and lyrics will, or should have you in awe. Yes there are gaps but thats where your imagination should come in.

Cant believe i had not heard any of their stuff before, the back catalogue is also full of wonderful this guy has a real gift for lyrics and melody

Genius

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

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