Pony

Pony

by Orville Peck
Pony

Pony

by Orville Peck

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)

$24.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

"You a real cowboy?" "Well, that depends on what you think a real cowboy is â?¦" That bit of dialogue from Urban Cowboy, the movie that turned country music into an unfortunate sort of mass market phenomenon in the '80s, comes to mind while listening to Pony, the debut album from Canadian vocalist and songwriter Orville Peck. Peck sure knows how to dress like a cowboy, he has a voice that's big as all outdoors, and he can write a melody with the dramatic sweep of a classic John Ford western. But that fringed mask Peck wears, the guitar figures that evoke shoegaze and goth sounds as much as vintage country & western, and the casual references to getting high with hustlers, sexually ambiguous rodeo riders, and fellow cowpokes calling him pretty make it clear Peck is not about to become the new Marty Robbins. But as an artist who at once embraces and subverts the tropes of classic country music and the iconography of the North American cowboy, Peck delivers some of the most enjoyable cultural detournement since Robert Lopez transformed himself into El Vez, and he's an even better singer. Peck's instrument suggests some fortunate cross between Elvis Presley, Chris Isaak, Roy Orbison, and Morrissey, and if his delivery is a bit melodramatic in its swagger and brio, it suits the material, and his pipes are strong enough to make it work. Peck's melodies run the gamut from sweetly sad to cheerfully defiant, and the production and arrangements make the performances sound spacious, dynamic, and powerfully satisfying; while the subtext adds to the drama of this music, you can listen to this at face value as western music for 21st century cowboys and still enjoy it tremendously. With Pony, Orville Peck could probably get over on sheer audacity, but his talent is as impressive as his ideas are smart and unexpected, and this is one of the best and most fascinating debuts from an alt-country-adjacent artist in a very long time. If Orville Peck doesn't redefine "Urban Cowboy," then in all likelihood nobody can. ~ Mark Deming

Product Details

Release Date: 03/22/2019
Label: Sub Pop
UPC: 0098787129311
Rank: 4165

Tracks

  1. Dead of Night
  2. Winds Change
  3. Turn to Hate
  4. Buffalo Run
  5. Queen of the Rodeo
  6. Kansas (Remembers Me Now)
  7. Old River
  8. Big Sky
  9. Roses Are Falling
  10. Take You Back (The Iron Hoof Cattle Call)
  11. Hope to Die
  12. Nothing Fades Like the Light

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Orville Peck   Primary Artist,Banjo,Guitar,Vocals,Keyboards
Jordan Koop   Guitar
Duncan Hay Jennings   Guitar,Keyboards
Lucas Savatti   Bass
Kris Bowering   Drums
Terry Ondang   Vocals (Background)
Tina Jones   Banjo

Technical Credits

Jordan Koop   Mixing,Engineer
Harris Newman   Mastering
Sean Pearson   Engineer
Nicholas Gordon   Cover Photo
Daniel Pitout   Composer
Duncan Hay Jennings   Composer
Orville Peck   Composer
Evan Desjardins   Vocal Engineer
Matt McCormick   Illustrations
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews