Wednesday, September 13, 2006

"Avalanche" cut out of "Illinoise"

And an update on one of our most literate of minstrels:
Sufjan Stevens has released outtakes from "Come Feel the
Illinoise," in an album called "The Avalanche", available on
asthmatickitty
.
(The hyperlinks to the two albums referencing Wikipedia have more details and some fascinating collateral stuff, e.g., this citation from the "Illinoise" entry-
  • "A mash-up song entitled "Zombies Walk!!" and attributed to Two Faced John McCartney mixes together Sufjan Stevens's "They Are Night Zombies...!!" and Kanye West's rap song "Jesus Walks". Download an mp3." )
  • Here's what I received in an email from the label:


    "The little secret behind the Illinois record is that it was originally conceived as a double album, culminating in a musical collage of nearly 50 songs. But as the project began to develop into an unwieldy epic, common sense weighed in—as did the opinions of others—and the project was cut in half. But as 2005 came to a close, Sufjan returned to the old, forsaken songs on his 8-track like a grandfather remembering his youth, indulging in old journals and newspaper clippings. What he uncovered went beyond the merits of nostalgia; it was more like an ensemble of capricious friends and old acquaintances wearing party outfits, waiting to be let in at the front door, for warm drinks and interesting conversation. Among them were Saul Bellow, Ann Landers, Adlai Stevenson, and a brief cameo from Henry Darger's Vivian Girls. The gathering that followed would become the setting for the songs on The Avalanche: Outtakes and Extras from the Illinois Album.

    "Sufjan gleaned 21 useable tracks from the abandoned material, including three alternate versions of Chicago. Some songs were in finished form, others were merely outlines, gesture drawings, or musical scribbles mumbled on a hand-held tape recorder. Most of the material required substantial editing, new arrangements or vocals. Much of the work was done at the end of 2005 or in January the following year. Sufjan invited many of the original Illinoisemakers to fill in the edges: drums, trumpet, a choir of singers. The centerpiece, of course, was the title track—The Avalanche—a song intended for the leading role on the Illinois album but eventually cut and placed as a bonus track on the vinyl release. In his rummaging through old musical memorabilia, Sufjan began to use this song as a meditation on the editorial process, returning to old forms, knee-deep in debris, sifting rocks and river water for an occasional glint of gold. "I call ye cabin neighbors," the song bemuses, "I call you once my friends." And like an avid social organizer, Sufjan took in all the odd musical misfits and gathered them together for a party of their own, like good friends.

    "A careful listener may uncover the obvious trend on this record: almost every song on the Illinois album has a counterpart on the outtakes. Carl Sandburg arm-wrestles Saul Bellow. The aliens landing near Highland salute Clyde Tombaugh, the man who discovered Pluto. The loneliness of "Casimir Pulaski Day" deepens even further in the foreboding soundtrack to "Pittsfield." At its best, The Avalanche is an exercise in form, revealing the working habits of one of the most productive songwriters today. As an illustration, the avalanche refers to the snow and rubble that falls off the side of a mountain, or, in this case, the musical debris generously chucked from an abundant epic. It's unlikely you'll find a mountain in the Prairie State so the metaphor will have to do."


    Tracklist:
    The Avalanche
    Dear Mr Supercomputer
    Adlai Stevenson
    The Vivian Girls Are Visited In the Night by Saint Dargarius and his Squadron of Benevolent Butterflies
    Chicago (acoustic version)
    The Henney Buggy Band
    Saul Bellow
    Carlyle Lake
    Springfield, or Bobby Got a Shadfly Caught in his Hair
    The Mistress Witch from McClure
    (or, The Mind That Knows Itself)
    Kaskaskia River
    Chicago (adult contemporary
    easy listening version)

    Inaugural Pop Music for
    Jane Margaret Byrne
    No Man's Land
    The Palm Sunday Tornado Hits Crystal Lake
    The Pick-up
    The Perpetual Self, or
    What Would Saul Alinsky Do?"
    For Clyde Tombaugh
    Chicago (Multiple Personality
    Disorder version)

    Pittsfield
    The Undivided Self
    (for Eppie and Popo)

    No comments:

    The Minus One on slide show now playing "The Minus One" is the name of the group Dana Alberts, Liam Hart and Mike Henry started in the eighties. The band released four singles through the "Skate Rock" series through Thrasher Magazine, and appeared on “One Giant Leap”, a compilation record released in England on Venture Records in 1983. The next year, they recorded “Where A Man Was Made,” with Spencer Dryden on drums (Jefferson Airplane drummer) and Naomi Ruth Isenberg (Dan Hicks and the Hot Licks) on violin. Minus One toured the U.S. in 1985 with the VKTMS, the punk band formed by drummer Louis Gwerder and featuring Nyna Crawford. Later that year Alberts was approached by Danny Sugerman, the author and former manager of the “Doors, and Iggy Pop's manager, after Sugerman had heard a tape of the band. This led them to an offer of a record deal from Geffen Records. The band, broke up before the deal could be consummated. They reformed in late 2006, and are be currently rehearsing to play extensively in 2007.