From Wikipedia - Reading time: 6 min
| Heron King Blues | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 2004 | |||
| Genre | Country rock, experimental rock | |||
| Label | Thrill Jockey | |||
| Califone chronology | ||||
| ||||
Heron King Blues is an album by the American band Califone, released in 2004.[1][2] It is in part a concept album about singer Tim Rutili's recurring bird dreams and ornithophobia.[3][4] The band supported the album with UK and North American tours.[5][6]
Rutili was backed on most of the tracks by percussionists Ben Massarella and Joe Adamik and multi-instrumentalist Jim Becker.[7][8] Califone recorded the album in an improvisational manner, choosing to not start the sessions with existing songs or rehearsed structures.[4] The band was inspired by Captain Beefheart's Mirror Man, which was allegedly recorded in a single night.[9] Their initial plan was to record an EP that would give them a reason to tour.[10] The foundations of the tracks were completed in three days in a studio on the south side of Chicago, with the band then adding lyrics and overdubs.[11][12] They employed samples and looped beats on some of the tracks, and used steel guitar, bottles, and hand drums, among other instruments.[13][14] The 15-minute title track, which was inspired by a Druid mythical character appropriated by the Romans, is mostly instrumental.[15][10] "Trick Bird" was cowritten with members of the band Orso.[16] The making of the album was somewhat tense; after the band also had equipment stolen during their tour, they decided to take a break.[17]
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | |
| Creative Loafing | A−[10] |
| The Gazette | |
| The Herald | 3/5[19] |
| Pitchfork | 8.4/10[20] |
| Spin | B[21] |
The New York Times stated that the album "ambles through stereo-warped slide-guitar twangs and hall-of-mirrors funk as Tim Rutili contemplates apocalypse without raising his voice."[22] The Chicago Tribune praised the "electronic experimentation" and "richly atmospheric tone poems"; the paper later listed Heron King Blues as the best local indie album of 2004.[23][24] The Herald said that the bandmembers "have a unique, fractured take on the blues and country-rock music of their country: this is psychedelic, bizarre, low-key lunacy."[19] The Times opined that "they seem to start out with complete chaos and somehow fashion a structure that mortal ears can comprehend (although the lyrics often still need some work)."[25]
The Observer concluded that "the rolling, often improvised sections recall at times the calmer passages of Captain Beefheart, but boast a spirit all their own."[26] The Toronto Star called the title track "a chugging, largely instrumental entry that sounds like a jam session involving Jeff Beck and an ensemble of new music gurus."[27] The Sydney Morning Herald noted that Califone "share a space with the likes of Tom Waits in sounding both banged-up and spacious at once, arriving at an uneasy but magnetic beauty the way they shape their sonic clutter."[28]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Wingbone" | |
| 2. | "Trick Bird" | |
| 3. | "Sawtooth Sung a Cheater's Song" | |
| 4. | "Apple" | |
| 5. | "Lion & Bee" | |
| 6. | "2 Sisters Drunk on Each Other" | |
| 7. | "Heron King Blues" | |
| 8. | "Outro" |