Helplessness Blues

Helplessness Blues

by Fleet Foxes
Helplessness Blues

Helplessness Blues

by Fleet Foxes

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)

$29.99 
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Overview

Props to Helplessness Blues for making the fretless zither cool again. On their second album, Fleet Foxes continue to take their music in unusual directions, creating a baroque folk-pop sound that hints at a number of influences -- Simon & Garfunkel, Fairport Convention, the Beach Boys -- but is too unique, too esoteric, too damn weird to warrant any direct links between the Seattle boys and their predecessors. It's still a downright gorgeous record, though, filled to the brim with glee club harmonies and the sort of stringed instruments that are virtually unknown to anyone who didn't go to music school (and even if you did, when's the last time you rocked out on the Marxophone?). Relying on obscure instrumentation can be a dangerous game, and Fleet Foxes occasionally run the risk of sounding too clever for their own good, as if the need to "out-folk" groups like Mumford & Sons and Midlake is more important than writing memorable, articulate folk tunes. But Helplessness Blues has the necessary songs to back it up, from the slow crescendos of the album-opening "Montezuma" to the sweeping orchestral arrangement of the encore number, "Grown Ocean." Robin Pecknold remains the ringleader of this Celtic circus. His is the only voice to cut through the thick, lush harmonies that Fleet Foxes splash across every refrain like paint, and his lyrics -- rife with allusions to the Bible, Dante the Magician, and the poetry of W.B. Yeats -- reach beyond the territory he occupied on the band's first record, which painted simple geographical portraits with songs like "Sun It Rises," "Ragged Wood," "Quiet Houses," and "Blue Ridge Mountains." On Helplessness Blues, he's just as interested in the landscape of the human heart. Still, it's the music that stands out, and the band's acoustic folk/chamber pop combo makes every song sound like a grand tribute to back-to-the-land living. ~ Andrew Leahey

Product Details

Release Date: 05/03/2011
Label: Sub Pop
UPC: 0098787088816
Rank: 1325

Tracks

Disc 1

  1. Montezuma
  2. Bedouin Dress
  3. Sim Sala Bim
  4. Battery Kinzie
  5. The Plains/Bitter Dancer
  6. Helplessness Blues

Disc 2

  1. The Cascades
  2. Lorelei
  3. Someone You'd Admire
  4. The Shrine/An Argument
  5. Blue Spotted Tail
  6. Grown Ocean

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Fleet Foxes   Primary Artist
Morgan Henderson   Woodwind,Bass (Upright)
Christian Wargo   Vocals,Guitar (Bass)
Bill Patton   Pedal Steel,Lap Steel Guitar
Alina To   Violin
Skyler Skjelset   Harp,Mandolin,Guitar (Acoustic),Guitar (Electric)
Casey Wescott   Piano,Crumar,Tremolo,Harmonium,Mellotron,Music Box,Marxophone,Pump Organ,Harpsichord,Tibetan Bowls,Moog Synthesizer
Josh Tillman   Drums,Vocals,Percussion
Robin Pecknold   Harp,Piano,Fiddle,Vocals,Mandolin,Harmonium,Hammer Dulcimer,Moog Synthesizer,Guitar (Acoustic),Guitar (Electric),Prophet Synthesizer

Technical Credits

Greg Calbi   Mastering
Phil Ek   Mixing,Engineer,Producer
Cathy Ferrante   Assistant
Jay Follette   Assistant
Trevor Spencer   Assistant
Fleet Foxes   Arranger,Producer
Trey Many   Booking
Mark Byrne   A&R
Brian McPherson   Legal Advisor
Dusty Summers   Design
Brian Kornfeld   Assistant
James Alderman   Booking
Casey Wescott   Harmony,Arranger
Robin Pecknold   Composer,Type Design
Jonny Mendoza   Assistant
Sean Pecknold   Design,Collage,Photography
Adam Armstrong   Assistant
Toby Liebowitz   Cover Illustration
Chris Alderson   Coloring
Davey Brozoowski   Assistant
Hanna Benn   String Arrangements
Olivia Park-Sargent   Paintings
Sue Busch   A&R
Aja Pecknold   Management
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