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94 of 103 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Thrill Specter, October 28, 2003
On paper the Decemberists sound just ghastly: grad students play dress up, check into the Neutral Milk Hotel, and play the Chuck Dickens/Pirate Jenny songbook as sung by Rufus Wainwright imitating Neil Young. Yet it was love at first accordion wheeze when I encountered them as an opening act. On stage, they're the sweet American cousins of the Mekons and the Go-Betweens, radiating intelligence and shades of dark anarchy in everything they do. I got 2002's excellent Castaways & Cutouts at the merch table that night and immediately fell in love with the haunting (literally) opening track "Leslie Ann Levine," a lament from a dead girl's point-of-view. Specters from the past are the key to Her Majesty the Decemberists. Songwriter Colin Meloy looks through their eyes to shed light on the darkness of our age. The conceit confuses at first: what are whalebone corsets, radios, telephones and pantaloons doing in the same song? Is that '70s wah-wah guitar and crunchy electric piano I hear amid sea chanteys and old country reels? The Decemberists' Victorian mirror provides a tantalizing, innocent and often deceiving distance to songs about sexual slumming ("Shanty for the Arethusa"), voyeurism and Onanism ("Billy Liar"), emotional sadism ("The Bachelor and the Bride"), the homoerotic thrill of warmongering - just ask Bush and Blair - ("The Soldiering Life"); and a love song to that ultimate city as strumpet, L.A. ("Los Angeles, I'm Yours"). That last song is the album's real standout. Strumming Elton John's Bennie and the Jets vamp on his guitar, Meloy's 18th century busker stands as an evangelical emissary on the corner of Sunset and Vine who blushes as girls with bare midriffs and boys with jeans nearly to their knees slouch on by. ("I can see your undies!" he intones, hilariously.) As a classic sunny West Coast pop arrangement builds and swells around him (think Stevie Wonder meets Richard Carpenter), Meloy summons cherubs and seraphim to help him dispel the stink of burnt cocaine and rotting morals before crying out ecstatically to the city as whore who both attracts and repels him, "Los Angeles, my love!", as if loving her might save her. If you've ever spent time actively engaged with the City of Lost Angels, this song will wrench your heart.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Something different, ferchrissakes!, December 18, 2004
I like a band that doesn't seem to be trying to be anything except whatever the hell they are. This is the opposite of, say, Wilco, a fine, talented bunch of people who never tire of showing us all the sounds they can ape perfectly. It's so very very good, but so what?
Colin Meloy is an original, with a confident, goofy voice. He sings his sad, slightly mean, theatrical songs with no apologies. And why should he apologize? The best stuff gets better the more you listen. On one pass, it was just interesting enough to get a second... on the second, hmmm, there's some interesting stuff here... next thing I knew, it was living in the car player, with each listen convincing me of the brilliance of another song.
If you like to be beaten over the head, forget about the Decemberists. But if you're willing to give effort to material that rewards it, check it out.
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This Band is not Comparable with Neutral Milk Hotel, November 8, 2003
By A Customer
I'm not sure if I understand why everyone (reviewers, listeners, etc.) insists on comparing the Decemeberists with Neutral Milk Hotel. Short of blatantly derivative/plaigaristic music, there is absolutely no reason to fault an album for sharing a few superficial characteristics with another album. Yes, both Colin Meloy and Jeff Magnum are highly literate songwriters that don't write love songs and sing with a British affectation, but other than that there is really no basis to any of the absurdly scathing reviews that denounce the brilliant "Her Majesty the Decemberists" as unoriginal. That rant aside, you, the reader, should definitely buy this album. Breaking free of many existing pop cliches, the Decemberists choose to write songs about Victorian-era characters backed by skillful instrumentation. The keyboardist/accordianist Jenny Conlee is a standout, and her virtuosity never fails to please, while the bassist and drummer (Nate Query and Rachel Blumberg, respectively) do solid jobs with the rhythm work. The real standout, though, is Colin Meloy, whose songwriting provides the album its atmospheric core. "Los Angeles, I'm Yours" is a brilliantly veiled ode/tirade to its titular city, with a strong guitar backbone, while the hauntingly beautiful "The Gymnast, High Above the Ground" is simply one of the best songs I've heard in years. And while "Song For the Myla Goldberg" drowns in its own literary cleverness, lost in an uninteresting melody, the rest of the album is so wonderful that it doesn't even matter. And yes, I do like Neutral Milk Hotel, but I am also capable of liking other bands, even if their lead singers sound vaguely similar.
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