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He's Got the Whole This Land Is Your His Hands
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He's Got the Whole This Land Is Your His Hands
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
He's Got the Whole This Land Is Your His Hands
Current price: $14.99
Size: CD
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He's Got the Whole This Land Is Your Land in His Hands
is the first "proper" full-length from long-running Chicago experimenters
Joan of Arc
since their 2012 self-titled LP. During the five-year gap, they did release
Testimonium Songs
, an album of music written for a theater project based on the long-form work Testimony by poet
Charles Reznikoff
. In late 2016, they also toured briefly in celebration of the group's 20th anniversary. Bandleader
Tim Kinsella
wrote dozens of songs in the interim as well, but chucked them all when the band reconvened, opting instead to build new material out of group improvisation. The resulting
He's Got...
features the lineup of
Kinsella
,
Jeremy Boyle
Bobby Burg
Theo Katsaounis
, and new member and co-lyricist
Melina Ausikaitis
, who sings lead or co-lead on a few of the tracks. It was recorded live at locations throughout Chicagoland, including an art gallery, a downtown hotel's basketball court, a West Side industrial space, and a friend's Airbnb. The uneven sound environments suit the mercurial set of songs, which seem at least partly motivated by confrontation. After a long album title that plays with a revered Christian spiritual and American protest-folk song, it opens with the lyrics "What the fuck!" Later,
Hitler
, ISIS, and
Phil Collins
are not off limits while the record juggles the acerbic, playful, and abstract. Musically, opening track "Smooshed That Cocoon" features emphatic distortion, glitchy Atari-era computer tones, and mechanical beats under a punky half rap ("One heroic act of passivity is finally gonna open that flower"). Catchier but still explicit, "This Must Be the Placenta" muses on life, death, sex, booze, and prison. Elsewhere, the more atmospheric "Grange Hex Stream" repeats "There is no place safe/And everything is perfect" among other absurdities, while "F Is for Fake" takes a narrative approach over banjo, piano, and still more pulsing and glitchy electronics. It's a very "in the moment" kind of album, in terms of some of its lyrical references and its improvisational feel;
laughs, talks, and is bleeped in the course of the live takes. ~ Marcy Donelson
is the first "proper" full-length from long-running Chicago experimenters
Joan of Arc
since their 2012 self-titled LP. During the five-year gap, they did release
Testimonium Songs
, an album of music written for a theater project based on the long-form work Testimony by poet
Charles Reznikoff
. In late 2016, they also toured briefly in celebration of the group's 20th anniversary. Bandleader
Tim Kinsella
wrote dozens of songs in the interim as well, but chucked them all when the band reconvened, opting instead to build new material out of group improvisation. The resulting
He's Got...
features the lineup of
Kinsella
,
Jeremy Boyle
Bobby Burg
Theo Katsaounis
, and new member and co-lyricist
Melina Ausikaitis
, who sings lead or co-lead on a few of the tracks. It was recorded live at locations throughout Chicagoland, including an art gallery, a downtown hotel's basketball court, a West Side industrial space, and a friend's Airbnb. The uneven sound environments suit the mercurial set of songs, which seem at least partly motivated by confrontation. After a long album title that plays with a revered Christian spiritual and American protest-folk song, it opens with the lyrics "What the fuck!" Later,
Hitler
, ISIS, and
Phil Collins
are not off limits while the record juggles the acerbic, playful, and abstract. Musically, opening track "Smooshed That Cocoon" features emphatic distortion, glitchy Atari-era computer tones, and mechanical beats under a punky half rap ("One heroic act of passivity is finally gonna open that flower"). Catchier but still explicit, "This Must Be the Placenta" muses on life, death, sex, booze, and prison. Elsewhere, the more atmospheric "Grange Hex Stream" repeats "There is no place safe/And everything is perfect" among other absurdities, while "F Is for Fake" takes a narrative approach over banjo, piano, and still more pulsing and glitchy electronics. It's a very "in the moment" kind of album, in terms of some of its lyrical references and its improvisational feel;
laughs, talks, and is bleeped in the course of the live takes. ~ Marcy Donelson