Rock Albums:

Carnival of Souls

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Description

Carnival Of Souls was released on Fire Records. It is Pere Ubu's 18th album over a forty year career that has seen them break rules, confuse and continue to divide music critics globally. Carnival of Souls was conceived in the midst of a gruelling tour schedule that accompanied the release of Lady from Shanghai. The band performed a live underscore for a screening of the 1962 movie that gives the new album its name at the 2013 East End Film Festival in London. A ‘shock troops’ version of the band went on the road in the UK and Europe to evolve those ideas into songs, improvising entirely new sets of music around core themes each night. On the road, the frayed nerves of the group meant they would switch from a whisper to a scream at any given moment, provoking each other, egging each other on and occasionally erupting as if in violent rebuke, before moments of gentle, bittersweet reprieve an extraordinary work resulted. Transporting from relentless speed to weightlessness, noir riffs to drums pounding hoodoo grooves, each track offers a different experience. The CD version of the album includes ‘Brother Ray’, described as a twelve-minute prequel to Nathanael West's The Day of the Locust. On the vinyl version, five one-minute ‘Strychnine Interludes’ are woven through the album. Built around shortwave interference, a deconstructed garage riff and secret Morse code transmissions, these interludes underline both the otherworldliness of the songs and the album's credentials as a song cycle.

Review:

Continuing their trilogy of albums inspired by classic films, Pere Ubu move from the noir ambiance of The Lady from Shanghai to songs based on Carnival of Souls, director Herk Harvey's influ­ential, low-budget horror movie from 1962. Lady from Shanghai revitalized the band's creativity, especially on songs like the equally catchy and unsettling “Mandy,” which delivered dance-pop Pere Ubu style. Carnival of Souls goes even further, digging into the band's darkest, most challenging realms as well as surprisingly serene ones. Many of these songs came from Pere Ubu's score for the movie, which they developed and performed during The Lady from Shanghai tour; the stress of working so much acted as a crucible for this volatile album. As Midwestern experimentalists with a decidedly spooky bent, Pere Ubu are uniquely equipped to use Carnival of Souls' small-town surrealism for their own devices. “Dr. Faustus,” one of the album's most score-like pieces, combines metallic percussion, spare guitars and David Thomas' muttered vocals into something rustic and rickety, yet threatening at a moment's notice (an effect the band magnifies on the epic 12-minute closer “Brother Ray,” which the band describes as a prequel to Nathanael West's The Day of the Locust). “Carnival,” which slows a lilting organ melody to a zombie's pace, could be a more literal exercise in horror music, but with Thomas threatening that “96 tears will burn your cheeks” and “monkey knows best,” it's disorienting in the best possible way. Throughout the album, the band leaves their own mark on the film's iconic imagery. “Road to Utah” unfurls like a lonesome highway, its organ melody nodding to the film's original score by Gene Moore; more elliptically, “Visions of the Moon” reflects the isolation protagonist Mary Henry feels as the plot thickens. “Drag the River” captures the film's circular feel and visions of death so perfectly (hearing Thomas bellow “Moon-faced! Doom-struck!” is one of the album's most satisfying and terrifying moments) that it's virtually a musical spoiler. However, Carnival of Souls' most immediate moment, its “Mandy,” is “Bus Station,” which weaves Screaming Jay Hawkins' “I Put a Spell on You” into the film's oppressively monotonous world via herky-jerky rhythms and Thomas' sing-song delivery. Pere Ubu also manages the not-insignificant feat of tying this album to Lady from Shanghai thanks to newest member Darryl Boon's clarinet, which gives an alien yet vintage feel to songs as far-flung as the thundering surf-meets-metal workout “Golden Surf II” and the lovely “Irene,” which reprises the allusions to “I Put a Spell on You” in oddly comforting fashion. Even more ambitious, rewarding and exciting than its predecessor, Carnival of Souls is a thrilling album that raises expectations for the trilogy's final installment to the skies. – Heather Phares (All Music Guide)

Track Listing:

Disc 1:
  1. Golden Surf II
  2. Drag the River
  3. Visions of the Moon
  4. Dr Faustus
  5. Bus Station
  6. Road to Utah
  7. Carnival
  8. Irene
  9. Brother Ray
Release date NZ
September 12th, 2014
Artist
Album Length (Minutes)
46:15
Label
Fire Records
Number of Discs
1
Original Release Year
2014
Box Dimensions (mm)
142x125x10
Product ID
22820106

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