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ALWAYS THE BRIDESMAID: VOL 1The DecemberistsProg Folk |
From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website


In response the group set about to put together a series of singles while they recovered from the road and toiled in the studio on their new studio project. The result is ‘Always the Bridesmaid’, a 3-disc series released in the latter half of 2008 and mostly available from on-line outlets like Amazon and iTunes (although Jealous Butcher offers all three as 12” vinyl singles through their website). None of these songs are progressive; in fact, there seems to be a conscious attempt to craft catchy, pop hooks and light, unburdened themes as opposed to some of the work the band has been known for in their studio work that requires rapt attention on the part of the listener, not to mention a yeoman’s working knowledge of obscure literary and historical references.
This first volume is comprised of two songs, “Valerie Plame” and “O New England”. The first came into being as a result of band leader Colin Meloy’s awareness of Ms. Plame’s public exposure in the Bush administration’s CIA spy-leak debacle of 2007. the song isn’t really about her per se, Meloy has just said in interviews that he felt her name rolled off the tongue in a way that it belonged in a song. For the most part I agree, and the toe-tapping tempo and simple rhythm put Plame’s name in the listener’s head where it will stay for several hours after the song is done. Lyrically this one is sort of an extension of “The Bagman's Gambit” from ‘Picaresque’, a convoluted love story involving spies and government agents in secret-keeping and secret-sharing trysts. Not a timeless masterpiece, but I’ll admit the song achieves the band’s goal of keeping me interested in them.
The other half of the record features “O New England”, an easy-to-embrace song despite several geographically-incorrect references to New York, which is not in New England despite confusion to the contrary. Meloy puts out his most convincing Michael Stipe vibe here, which along with a simple and seductive beat and Meloy’s languid acoustic guitar strumming will make anyone but the most dour person tap their toe and smile just a little.
There would be two more of these ‘bridesmaid’ singles to come, and none of them will be remembered ten years from now. But in the context of why they were created I have to say the band did a good job putting them together, and they undoubtedly achieved their goal. This one is the best of the three though, and the only one I will give three stars to. Recommended if you are looking for a mild mood- lift on a dreary day; come to think of it, that’s pretty much what Decemberists music is all about anyway.
peace

So around 1898, or whenever, the Decemberists were halfway through collecting revenue checks from Crane Wife and creating the cover art for Hazards of Love, and Colin realized that someone had better put SOMETHING out to remind people who the band was between albums. The result? This...experiment, the Always the Bridesmaid singles collection; a very odd kettle of fish to be sure, and not that’s not always a good thing.
As usual, I seem to disagree with the general sentiments regarding my favorite band. Most folks consider the first single (subtitled Valerie Plame) to be the best. Why? Sure, the first side contains “Valerie Plame,” and it’s a cute song. But is it good? It’s not better than “Sixteen Military Wives,” a song with which it has a lot in common both plot-wise (slightly political) and structurally (anthemic pop song with a pocket orchestra, right down to some “Hey Jude”-esque chanting). But as much fun as it is, I don’t get that Decemberists feel from it.
The same can be said for the folksier, east coast insulting B-side “O New England.” Is it pleasant? SURE...and while it is nice to hear Colin ragging on some place that is not my home town for a change (I love the lyrics “O New England, in the face of your empire, I think I’d rather just wait in the car”), is there really anything Decemberists about this song? In a word, not really. If “Plame” was a Decemberists song first and an indie pop song second, “New England” is an indie pop song first and a Decemberists song second.
No, sorry sirs. Despite the generous use of banjos and watery backup vocals that live upon this single’s surface, this is NOT my Decemberists. Enjoyable indie pop? Sure. Artsy, folksy edge? You bet. Could The Shins or Death Cab for Cutie put out the same single? Of course. You can enjoy it. I rarely do.

THE DECEMBERISTS Always The Bridesmaid: Vol 1 ratings only
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sauromat (alexander)
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rushaholic (T. R.)
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sivadavis (Guenter)
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