Home
Skeletal Lamping
Barnes and Noble
Skeletal Lamping
Current price: $15.99
![Skeletal Lamping](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0644110944917_p0_v2_s600x595.jpg)
![Skeletal Lamping](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0644110944917_p0_v2_s600x595.jpg)
Barnes and Noble
Skeletal Lamping
Current price: $15.99
Size: CD
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
During the closing moments of 2007's
Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?
, bandleader
Kevin Barnes
introduced an alter ego, a flamboyant singer by the name of
Georgie Fruit
. One year later, that character runs amok on
Skeletal Lamping
, having wrenched the spotlight away from
Barnes
' sugary pop and trained it on an ambitious hybrid of glam rock, experimental R&B, and
Scissor Sisters
-styled sex-funk.
sounds truly uninhibited under the
Fruit
guise, making declarations like "I'm just a black she-male!" with flamboyant confidence. Such a shift in direction marks
Of Montreal
's ascent into the psychedelic clouds where
Ziggy Stardust
once flew, only this time, the listener catches a ride on the back of a transgendered
Prince
fanatic whose songs are fragmented and confusing, yet still peppered with irresistible hooks. Like the album's cover art (an origami-influenced billfold whose flaps unfurl to form a giant floral display),
demands attention by being purposely puzzling. The music is extravagant and elaborate; each song is comprised of multiple vignettes, many of them completely different in style, and each track spills into the next. It's interesting to watch the pieces fit together -- to pinpoint the exact second where one song ends and another one begins. But whether or not you enjoy
depends on your tolerance for unchecked ambition and left-field experimentation, both of which are emphasized here.
have rarely sounded so free, so unrestrained, but this is a love-it-or-lump-it album, a polarizing effort that -- depending on personal preference -- is either irresistibly attractive or overzealously pretentious. ~ Andrew Leahey
Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer?
, bandleader
Kevin Barnes
introduced an alter ego, a flamboyant singer by the name of
Georgie Fruit
. One year later, that character runs amok on
Skeletal Lamping
, having wrenched the spotlight away from
Barnes
' sugary pop and trained it on an ambitious hybrid of glam rock, experimental R&B, and
Scissor Sisters
-styled sex-funk.
sounds truly uninhibited under the
Fruit
guise, making declarations like "I'm just a black she-male!" with flamboyant confidence. Such a shift in direction marks
Of Montreal
's ascent into the psychedelic clouds where
Ziggy Stardust
once flew, only this time, the listener catches a ride on the back of a transgendered
Prince
fanatic whose songs are fragmented and confusing, yet still peppered with irresistible hooks. Like the album's cover art (an origami-influenced billfold whose flaps unfurl to form a giant floral display),
demands attention by being purposely puzzling. The music is extravagant and elaborate; each song is comprised of multiple vignettes, many of them completely different in style, and each track spills into the next. It's interesting to watch the pieces fit together -- to pinpoint the exact second where one song ends and another one begins. But whether or not you enjoy
depends on your tolerance for unchecked ambition and left-field experimentation, both of which are emphasized here.
have rarely sounded so free, so unrestrained, but this is a love-it-or-lump-it album, a polarizing effort that -- depending on personal preference -- is either irresistibly attractive or overzealously pretentious. ~ Andrew Leahey