fbpx
Wikipedia

Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle

Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle is the debut studio album by the American band the Olivia Tremor Control, released on August 6, 1996, by Flydaddy Records. It is an eclectic album that encompasses a variety of genres, including indie pop, neo-psychedelia, and psychedelic pop. The first half of the album features songs that are influenced by bands of 1960s and 1970s, such as the Beach Boys and the Beatles. The second half features more experimental songs, including two long instrumental songs influenced by drone music and musique concrète. Dusk at Cubist Castle purports to be the soundtrack to an unfinished film, and the lyrics focus on surrealist imagery.

Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 6, 1996 (1996-08-06)
StudioPet Sounds, Denver
Genre
Length74:05
LabelFlydaddy
ProducerRobert Schneider
The Olivia Tremor Control chronology
Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle
(1996)
Black Foliage: Animation Music Volume One
(1999)

The Olivia Tremor Control was formed in Athens, Georgia, and the line-up comprised Bill Doss, Will Cullen Hart, Eric Harris, and John Fernandes. Doss and Hart had been writing songs for a studio album as early as 1993, and Dusk at Cubist Castle was recorded at Pet Sounds Studio in Denver, Colorado. Childhood friend Robert Schneider served as the producer, and the recording sessions featured several other musicians, including fellow Elephant 6 (and Neutral Milk Hotel) members Jeff Mangum and Julian Koster.

The first few thousand copies of the album were released with a bonus CD, Explanation II: Instrumental Themes and Dream Sequences. It has been claimed that this album will produce quadraphonic sound when played at the same time as that disc. However, the two discs differ in length by approximately five minutes, rendering this an unlikely intention. The Flydaddy 017 release was reissued as a double album with Explanation II as the second disc. This bonus disc was later re-released as a full album by Flydaddy in 1999 but the most recent Cloud Recordings reissues do not include the extra disc.

Background and recording edit

The Olivia Tremor Control originated as a psychedelic band called Cranberry Lifecycle.[1] This band was formed in Ruston, Louisiana in the late 1980s, by high school friends Will Cullen Hart and Jeff Mangum.[2] After graduating from high school, the two moved to Athens, Georgia, and reworked Cranberry Lifecycle songs under the name Synthetic Flying Machine.[3] Fellow Rustonian Bill Doss joined in 1993, and the lineup consisted of Hart on electric guitar, Doss on bass guitar, and Mangum on drums. The band gained a small following due in part to the psychedelic-infused music, which differed from the prevalent grunge sound in the city.[4] Mangum left the group shortly after its formation, as he wanted to focus on a solo project that would eventually become Neutral Milk Hotel.[5] Doss and Hart then decided to rename the group to the Olivia Tremor Control.[6] Mangum suggested the name, which was intended to be a surreal sounding phrase with no further meaning.[7][a]

After the release of the first Olivia Tremor Control EPCalifornia Demise–in 1994, Hart moved to Denver, while Doss moved to New York City to play in the band Chocolate USA.[9] By 1996, Doss was losing interest in Chocolate USA, and wanted to record more music with Hart. The two reconvened in Athens, and recruited multi-instrumentalists John Fernandes and Eric Harris.[9][10] With this lineup, the Olivia Tremor Control went to Denver to record their first studio album. Robert Schneider, a childhood friend of Doss and Hart, served as the producer, and the album was recorded at Pet Sounds Studio.[10]

Doss and Hart had been recording songs on 4-track tapes for a studio album as early as 1993.[10] Doss' ideas were more pop friendly while Hart wrote more experimental songs.[10] Their dichotomous partnership during this era drew some comparisons to Lennon–McCartney of the Beatles, although Stereogum noted that both Fernandes and Harris retained creative input.[10] Schneider played on several songs, and other musicians like Jeff Mangum and Julian Koster also contributed. Hart noted that the recording sessions were busy, and estimated that at least eight people played guitar on the song "The Opera House."[10]

Composition edit

Dusk at Cubist Castle is a 74 minute double album comprising 27 songs.[11] Critics have described Dusk at Cubist Castle as an eclectic album that encompasses a variety of genres, including indie pop, neo-psychedelia, and psychedelic pop.[12][13] Jason Ankeny of AllMusic also notes the influence of other genres, such as krautrock, noise music, and folk rock.[14] While discussing the music as a whole, Stereogum described Dusk at Cubist Castle as a "maximalist analog production, sonically distended with so many different ideas that it sounds a little different every time you hear it."[10] The album purports to be the soundtrack to an unfinished film titled Dusk at Cubist Castle. However, no such film ever existed.[15]

Some critics have found the first half of Dusk at Cubist Castle to be the more immediate and easily accessible than the rest of the album.[11][13] Zachary Houle of PopMatters describes these songs as "Beach Boys meets late-period Beatles in its take on psychedelica".[11] "Jumping Fences" and "Define a Transparent Dream" are among the more notable songs that are indebted to 1960s and 1970s bands.[11][13][16] Houle compares "Jumping Fences" to a lost Badfinger song, while "Define a Transparent Dream" is reminiscent of David Bowie's "Changes."[11] Paul Thompson of Pitchfork does note that while the Olivia Tremor Control are heavily influenced by these bands, they interpose their songs with what he describes as: "weird left turns, with hooks that seem to bubble out of nowhere before receding into themselves."[13]

The second half of the album features more experimental songs, influenced by drone music and musique concrète.[11][10] When asked about the inclusion of these experimental songs, Fernandes said: "We wanted to change the way people listen to music ... Make people who love the Beatles also appreciate John Cage."[10] An example of this experimentation is the suite of ten consecutive songs all titled "Green Typewriters".[11] The eighth song in the suite is nearly ten minutes, and is a drone piece that features the sound of standing bells, typewriter keys, passing cars, and dripping water.[11][10] The album's title track is a similar drone piece, which Houle compared to the music of a bad haunted house.[11] Houle does note that not every song on the second half of the album is experimental, and highlights the final song "NYC-25" as a "jaunty country rock number that leaves an aftertaste of the Beatles yet again."[11]

Dusk at Cubist Castle focuses on surrealist imagery, in particular dreams.[12][13] Hart described the album as "dream music for your mind."[17] Thompson identifies the opening song "The Opera House" as an example of lyrical surrealism, as it mentions going to the movie theater to simply watch the actors move their mouths.[13] Other topics found throughout the album include a dream that features model headshots of Gertrude Stein, and a cosmonaut who is too transfixed on the thoughts in his mind to speak.[12][13] Many of the lyrics found throughout Dusk at Cubist Castle are sincere and happy, which Stereogum noted was different from the prevailing ethos of 1990s indie music, which focused on disillusionment and irony.[10] In a 1997 interview, Doss said he wanted the Olivia Tremor Control's music to instill a sense of "mystery or happiness" in listeners. "I'm sending out a positive message, because the world needs it ... We're reaching for something that's hard to explain."[18]

Release and reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [14]
The Austin Chronicle     [19]
The A.V. ClubA[20]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music     [21]
NME8/10[22]
Pitchfork9.1/10[13]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide     [23]
Spin7/10[24]

Dusk at Cubist Castle was released on August 6, 1996, by Flydaddy Records.[10][25] Early CD pressings included a second album titled Explanation II: Instrumental Themes and Dream Sequences.[26] This album contains nine ambient songs, and in the liner notes it is suggested to play the two albums in synchronicity, as this would create quadraphonic sound.[11][b] The songs "The Opera House" and "Jumping Fences" were released as singles.[26] To promote the album, the Olivia Tremor Control served as an opener for Beck, and toured with Gorky's Zygotic Mynci in 1998.[27] Keyboardist Peter Erchick was brought on as the fifth band member while on tour.[28]

In a contemporary review of Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle, Tom Cox of NME called The Olivia Tremor Control "experts at combining the absurd with the uplifting".[22] Jason Cohen of The Austin Chronicle remarked that, with the exception of the "random bursts and transient noise" of "Green Typewriters", Dusk at Cubist Castle is "an embarrassment of pop riches, a mildly psychedelic, lavishly melodic quasi-masterpiece".[19] It ranked at number 37 on The Village Voice's year-end Pazz & Jop critics' poll.[29]

Dusk at Cubist Castle was later ranked at number 39 by the online magazine Pitchfork on its list of the best albums of the 1990s.[30]

Track listing edit

All songs written by The Olivia Tremor Control.

  1. "The Opera House" – 3:12
  2. "Frosted Ambassador" – 1:02
  3. "Jumping Fences" – 1:52
  4. "Define a Transparent Dream" – 2:49
  5. "No Growing (Exegesis)" – 3:00
  6. "Holiday Surprise 1, 2, 3" – 6:11
  7. "Courtyard" – 2:57
  8. "Memories of Jacqueline 1906" – 2:15
  9. "Tropical Bells" – 1:40
  10. "Can You Come Down with Us?" – 2:18
  11. "Marking Time" – 4:28
  12. "Green Typewriters" – 2:22
  13. "Green Typewriters" – 0:24
  14. "Green Typewriters" – 0:59
  15. "Green Typewriters" – 2:11
  16. "Green Typewriters" – 1:10
  17. "Green Typewriters" – 0:38
  18. "Green Typewriters" – 1:38
  19. "Green Typewriters" – 9:39
  20. "Green Typewriters" – 1:21
  21. "Green Typewriters" – 2:39
  22. "Spring Succeeds" – 2:25
  23. "Theme for a Very Delicious Grand Piano" – 0:57
  24. "I Can Smell the Leaves" – 1:50
  25. "Dusk at Cubist Castle" – 7:35
  26. "The Gravity Car" – 1:45
  27. "NYC-25" – 4:39

Personnel edit

Instrumentation, vocals and production by The Olivia Tremor Control:

  • Bill Doss – instrumentation, vocals, production, artwork and design
  • W. Cullen Hart – instrumentation, vocals, production, artwork and design
  • Eric Harris – instrumentation, vocals, production
  • John Fernandes – instrumentation, vocals, production

Additional instrumentation and production by The Elephant 6 Orchestra:

  • Robert Schneider – Tibetan prayer bowl, bass,[ambiguous] vocals, melodica, co-production, engineering
  • Jeff Mangum – chanter pipe, slide guitar, vocals, melodica, piano and space bubbles
  • Julian Koster – bowed electric guitar, mallet struck acoustic guitar and the singing saw
  • Steve Jacobek – trumpet
  • Rick Benjamin – trombone

Notes edit

  1. ^ Doss offered a different explanation of the band name in 1998, stating: "It refers to two friends, Jacqueline and Olivia, who were separated during the California earthquake of 1906 and have been searching for each other ever since, across different dimensions of time and space."[8]
  2. ^ Playing Dusk at Cubist Castle and Explanation II in synchronicity does not produce quadraphonic sound, as the two albums are of different lengths.[11]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Cooper 2005, pp. 9–10.
  2. ^ Cooper 2005, p. 9.
  3. ^ Clair 2022, Chapter 7 (Search phrase "Years earlier, listening to Pylon together on a drive out to a water park in Shreveport, Will, Jeff, and Robert decided they'd live in Athens together someday").
  4. ^ Cooper 2005, p. 18.
  5. ^ Clair 2022, Chapter 7 (Search phrase "Synthetic Flying Machine didn’t last very long").
  6. ^ Clair 2022, Chapter 7 (Search phrase "Will and Bill felt like a name change was in order").
  7. ^ Kramer n.d., p. 3.
  8. ^ Holmes 1998, p. 03.
  9. ^ a b Clair 2022, Chapter 10 (Search phrase "Meanwhile, Bill found himself losing interest in playing with Chocolate USA").
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Clair 2016.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Houle 2011.
  12. ^ a b c Umile 2004.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Thompson 2011.
  14. ^ a b Ankeny n.d.
  15. ^ Clair 2022, Chapter 10 (Search phrase "The full name of the album, Music from the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle, suggests it's the score to an abandoned movie project").
  16. ^ Scapelliti 2022.
  17. ^ Clair 2022, Chapter 10 (Search phrase " It's supposed to be dream music for your mind").
  18. ^ Vaziri 1997.
  19. ^ a b Cohen 1996.
  20. ^ LeMay 2011.
  21. ^ Larkin n.d.
  22. ^ a b Cox 1996.
  23. ^ Sarig 2004, p. 603.
  24. ^ Stephens 1996, p. 155.
  25. ^ Anon. 2021.
  26. ^ a b Anon. n.d.
  27. ^ Buckley 2003, p. 749.
  28. ^ Clair 2022, Chapter 14 (Search phrase "But that fall, not long after Dusk was released, the band needed a keyboard player").
  29. ^ Anon. 1997.
  30. ^ Anon. 2003.

References edit

  • Ankeny, Jason (n.d.). "Music from the Unrealized Film Script, Dusk at Cubist Castle – The Olivia Tremor Control". AllMusic. Retrieved March 10, 2016.
  • Anon. (n.d.). "Discography". The Olivia Tremor Control. Retrieved December 31, 2020.
  • Anon. (February 25, 1997). "The 1996 Pazz & Jop Critics Poll". The Village Voice. Retrieved May 9, 2016.
  • Anon. (November 17, 2003). "Top 100 Albums of the 1990s". Pitchfork. Retrieved March 10, 2016.
  • Anon. (August 6, 2021). "The Olivia Tremor Control Released Debut Album 'Music From The Unrealized Script: Dusk At Cubist Castle' 25 Years Ago Today". Magnet. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  • Buckley, Jonathan (2003). The Rough Guide to Rock. Rough Guides. ISBN 1-85828-457-0.
  • Clair, Adam (September 21, 2016). "Elephant 6 & Friends Reflect On The Legacy Of The Olivia Tremor Control's Dusk At Cubist Castle". Stereogum. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  • Clair, Adam (2022). Endless Endless, A Lo-Fi History of the Elephant 6 Mystery (E-book). Hachette. ISBN 978-0-30692-3968.
  • Cohen, Jason (November 15, 1996). "Olivia Tremor Control: Music From the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle (Flydaddy)". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved May 9, 2016.
  • Cooper, Kim (2005). In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. 33⅓. Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-1690-X.
  • Cox, Tom (September 21, 1996). . NME. Archived from the original on September 30, 2000. Retrieved March 10, 2016.
  • Holmes, Catherine Mantione (March 27, 1998). "Pop Music Tremor Control shakes things up". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
  • Houle, Zachary (November 8, 2011). "The Olivia Tremor Control Reissues 'Dusk at Cubist Castle' and 'Black Foliage'". PopMatters. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  • Kramer, Michael (n.d.). "Homemade Psychedelia For Modern Times". The New York Times. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
  • Larkin, Colin (n.d.). The Olivia Tremor Control. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-531373-4. Retrieved November 12, 2022. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  • LeMay, Matt (November 15, 2011). "The Olivia Tremor Control: Music From The Unrealized Film Script / Dusk At Cubist Castle Black Foliage: Animation Music, Vol. 1". The A.V. Club. Retrieved March 10, 2016.
  • Sarig, Roni (2004). "Olivia Tremor Control". In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8.
  • Scapelliti, Christopher (November 10, 2022). "Watch Indie-Rock Legends the Olivia Tremor Control Perform Their Infectious Signature Song, 'Jumping Fences'". Guitar Player. Retrieved July 31, 2023.
  • Stephens, Chuck (September 1996). "The Olivia Tremor Control: Music from the Unrealized Film Script—'Dusk at Cubist Castle'". Spin. Vol. 12, no. 6.
  • Thompson, Paul (November 17, 2011). "The Olivia Tremor Control: Music From the Unrealized Film Script: Dusk at Cubist Castle / Black Foliage: Animation Music Vol. 1". Pitchfork. Retrieved March 10, 2016.
  • Umile, Dominic (March 8, 2004). "The Olivia Tremor Control: Music From The Unrealized Film Script, Dusk At Cubist Castle [Reissue]". PopMatters. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  • Vaziri, Aidin (January 26, 1997). "Olivia Tremor Control Shakes Up The System". San Francisco Examiner.


music, from, unrealized, film, script, dusk, cubist, castle, debut, studio, album, american, band, olivia, tremor, control, released, august, 1996, flydaddy, records, eclectic, album, that, encompasses, variety, genres, including, indie, psychedelia, psychedel. Music from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle is the debut studio album by the American band the Olivia Tremor Control released on August 6 1996 by Flydaddy Records It is an eclectic album that encompasses a variety of genres including indie pop neo psychedelia and psychedelic pop The first half of the album features songs that are influenced by bands of 1960s and 1970s such as the Beach Boys and the Beatles The second half features more experimental songs including two long instrumental songs influenced by drone music and musique concrete Dusk at Cubist Castle purports to be the soundtrack to an unfinished film and the lyrics focus on surrealist imagery Music from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist CastleStudio album by the Olivia Tremor ControlReleasedAugust 6 1996 1996 08 06 StudioPet Sounds DenverGenreIndie pop neo psychedelia psychedelic popLength74 05LabelFlydaddyProducerRobert SchneiderThe Olivia Tremor Control chronologyMusic from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle 1996 Black Foliage Animation Music Volume One 1999 The Olivia Tremor Control was formed in Athens Georgia and the line up comprised Bill Doss Will Cullen Hart Eric Harris and John Fernandes Doss and Hart had been writing songs for a studio album as early as 1993 and Dusk at Cubist Castle was recorded at Pet Sounds Studio in Denver Colorado Childhood friend Robert Schneider served as the producer and the recording sessions featured several other musicians including fellow Elephant 6 and Neutral Milk Hotel members Jeff Mangum and Julian Koster The first few thousand copies of the album were released with a bonus CD Explanation II Instrumental Themes and Dream Sequences It has been claimed that this album will produce quadraphonic sound when played at the same time as that disc However the two discs differ in length by approximately five minutes rendering this an unlikely intention The Flydaddy 017 release was reissued as a double album with Explanation II as the second disc This bonus disc was later re released as a full album by Flydaddy in 1999 but the most recent Cloud Recordings reissues do not include the extra disc Contents 1 Background and recording 2 Composition 3 Release and reception 4 Track listing 5 Personnel 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 ReferencesBackground and recording editThe Olivia Tremor Control originated as a psychedelic band called Cranberry Lifecycle 1 This band was formed in Ruston Louisiana in the late 1980s by high school friends Will Cullen Hart and Jeff Mangum 2 After graduating from high school the two moved to Athens Georgia and reworked Cranberry Lifecycle songs under the name Synthetic Flying Machine 3 Fellow Rustonian Bill Doss joined in 1993 and the lineup consisted of Hart on electric guitar Doss on bass guitar and Mangum on drums The band gained a small following due in part to the psychedelic infused music which differed from the prevalent grunge sound in the city 4 Mangum left the group shortly after its formation as he wanted to focus on a solo project that would eventually become Neutral Milk Hotel 5 Doss and Hart then decided to rename the group to the Olivia Tremor Control 6 Mangum suggested the name which was intended to be a surreal sounding phrase with no further meaning 7 a After the release of the first Olivia Tremor Control EP California Demise in 1994 Hart moved to Denver while Doss moved to New York City to play in the band Chocolate USA 9 By 1996 Doss was losing interest in Chocolate USA and wanted to record more music with Hart The two reconvened in Athens and recruited multi instrumentalists John Fernandes and Eric Harris 9 10 With this lineup the Olivia Tremor Control went to Denver to record their first studio album Robert Schneider a childhood friend of Doss and Hart served as the producer and the album was recorded at Pet Sounds Studio 10 Doss and Hart had been recording songs on 4 track tapes for a studio album as early as 1993 10 Doss ideas were more pop friendly while Hart wrote more experimental songs 10 Their dichotomous partnership during this era drew some comparisons to Lennon McCartney of the Beatles although Stereogum noted that both Fernandes and Harris retained creative input 10 Schneider played on several songs and other musicians like Jeff Mangum and Julian Koster also contributed Hart noted that the recording sessions were busy and estimated that at least eight people played guitar on the song The Opera House 10 Composition editDusk at Cubist Castle is a 74 minute double album comprising 27 songs 11 Critics have described Dusk at Cubist Castle as an eclectic album that encompasses a variety of genres including indie pop neo psychedelia and psychedelic pop 12 13 Jason Ankeny of AllMusic also notes the influence of other genres such as krautrock noise music and folk rock 14 While discussing the music as a whole Stereogum described Dusk at Cubist Castle as a maximalist analog production sonically distended with so many different ideas that it sounds a little different every time you hear it 10 The album purports to be the soundtrack to an unfinished film titled Dusk at Cubist Castle However no such film ever existed 15 Some critics have found the first half of Dusk at Cubist Castle to be the more immediate and easily accessible than the rest of the album 11 13 Zachary Houle of PopMatters describes these songs as Beach Boys meets late period Beatles in its take on psychedelica 11 Jumping Fences and Define a Transparent Dream are among the more notable songs that are indebted to 1960s and 1970s bands 11 13 16 Houle compares Jumping Fences to a lost Badfinger song while Define a Transparent Dream is reminiscent of David Bowie s Changes 11 Paul Thompson of Pitchfork does note that while the Olivia Tremor Control are heavily influenced by these bands they interpose their songs with what he describes as weird left turns with hooks that seem to bubble out of nowhere before receding into themselves 13 The second half of the album features more experimental songs influenced by drone music and musique concrete 11 10 When asked about the inclusion of these experimental songs Fernandes said We wanted to change the way people listen to music Make people who love the Beatles also appreciate John Cage 10 An example of this experimentation is the suite of ten consecutive songs all titled Green Typewriters 11 The eighth song in the suite is nearly ten minutes and is a drone piece that features the sound of standing bells typewriter keys passing cars and dripping water 11 10 The album s title track is a similar drone piece which Houle compared to the music of a bad haunted house 11 Houle does note that not every song on the second half of the album is experimental and highlights the final song NYC 25 as a jaunty country rock number that leaves an aftertaste of the Beatles yet again 11 Dusk at Cubist Castle focuses on surrealist imagery in particular dreams 12 13 Hart described the album as dream music for your mind 17 Thompson identifies the opening song The Opera House as an example of lyrical surrealism as it mentions going to the movie theater to simply watch the actors move their mouths 13 Other topics found throughout the album include a dream that features model headshots of Gertrude Stein and a cosmonaut who is too transfixed on the thoughts in his mind to speak 12 13 Many of the lyrics found throughout Dusk at Cubist Castle are sincere and happy which Stereogum noted was different from the prevailing ethos of 1990s indie music which focused on disillusionment and irony 10 In a 1997 interview Doss said he wanted the Olivia Tremor Control s music to instill a sense of mystery or happiness in listeners I m sending out a positive message because the world needs it We re reaching for something that s hard to explain 18 Release and reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 14 The Austin Chronicle nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 19 The A V ClubA 20 Encyclopedia of Popular Music nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 21 NME8 10 22 Pitchfork9 1 10 13 The Rolling Stone Album Guide nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 23 Spin7 10 24 Dusk at Cubist Castle was released on August 6 1996 by Flydaddy Records 10 25 Early CD pressings included a second album titled Explanation II Instrumental Themes and Dream Sequences 26 This album contains nine ambient songs and in the liner notes it is suggested to play the two albums in synchronicity as this would create quadraphonic sound 11 b The songs The Opera House and Jumping Fences were released as singles 26 To promote the album the Olivia Tremor Control served as an opener for Beck and toured with Gorky s Zygotic Mynci in 1998 27 Keyboardist Peter Erchick was brought on as the fifth band member while on tour 28 In a contemporary review of Music from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle Tom Cox of NME called The Olivia Tremor Control experts at combining the absurd with the uplifting 22 Jason Cohen of The Austin Chronicle remarked that with the exception of the random bursts and transient noise of Green Typewriters Dusk at Cubist Castle is an embarrassment of pop riches a mildly psychedelic lavishly melodic quasi masterpiece 19 It ranked at number 37 on The Village Voice s year end Pazz amp Jop critics poll 29 Dusk at Cubist Castle was later ranked at number 39 by the online magazine Pitchfork on its list of the best albums of the 1990s 30 Track listing editAll songs written by The Olivia Tremor Control The Opera House 3 12 Frosted Ambassador 1 02 Jumping Fences 1 52 Define a Transparent Dream 2 49 No Growing Exegesis 3 00 Holiday Surprise 1 2 3 6 11 Courtyard 2 57 Memories of Jacqueline 1906 2 15 Tropical Bells 1 40 Can You Come Down with Us 2 18 Marking Time 4 28 Green Typewriters 2 22 Green Typewriters 0 24 Green Typewriters 0 59 Green Typewriters 2 11 Green Typewriters 1 10 Green Typewriters 0 38 Green Typewriters 1 38 Green Typewriters 9 39 Green Typewriters 1 21 Green Typewriters 2 39 Spring Succeeds 2 25 Theme for a Very Delicious Grand Piano 0 57 I Can Smell the Leaves 1 50 Dusk at Cubist Castle 7 35 The Gravity Car 1 45 NYC 25 4 39Personnel editInstrumentation vocals and production by The Olivia Tremor Control Bill Doss instrumentation vocals production artwork and design W Cullen Hart instrumentation vocals production artwork and design Eric Harris instrumentation vocals production John Fernandes instrumentation vocals production Additional instrumentation and production by The Elephant 6 Orchestra Robert Schneider Tibetan prayer bowl bass ambiguous vocals melodica co production engineering Jeff Mangum chanter pipe slide guitar vocals melodica piano and space bubbles Julian Koster bowed electric guitar mallet struck acoustic guitar and the singing saw Steve Jacobek trumpet Rick Benjamin tromboneNotes edit Doss offered a different explanation of the band name in 1998 stating It refers to two friends Jacqueline and Olivia who were separated during the California earthquake of 1906 and have been searching for each other ever since across different dimensions of time and space 8 Playing Dusk at Cubist Castle and Explanation II in synchronicity does not produce quadraphonic sound as the two albums are of different lengths 11 Footnotes edit Cooper 2005 pp 9 10 Cooper 2005 p 9 Clair 2022 Chapter 7 Search phrase Years earlier listening to Pylon together on a drive out to a water park in Shreveport Will Jeff and Robert decided they d live in Athens together someday Cooper 2005 p 18 Clair 2022 Chapter 7 Search phrase Synthetic Flying Machine didn t last very long Clair 2022 Chapter 7 Search phrase Will and Bill felt like a name change was in order Kramer n d p 3 Holmes 1998 p 03 a b Clair 2022 Chapter 10 Search phrase Meanwhile Bill found himself losing interest in playing with Chocolate USA a b c d e f g h i j k l Clair 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l Houle 2011 a b c Umile 2004 a b c d e f g h Thompson 2011 a b Ankeny n d Clair 2022 Chapter 10 Search phrase The full name of the album Music from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle suggests it s the score to an abandoned movie project Scapelliti 2022 Clair 2022 Chapter 10 Search phrase It s supposed to be dream music for your mind Vaziri 1997 a b Cohen 1996 LeMay 2011 Larkin n d a b Cox 1996 Sarig 2004 p 603 Stephens 1996 p 155 Anon 2021 a b Anon n d Buckley 2003 p 749 Clair 2022 Chapter 14 Search phrase But that fall not long after Dusk was released the band needed a keyboard player Anon 1997 Anon 2003 References editAnkeny Jason n d Music from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle The Olivia Tremor Control AllMusic Retrieved March 10 2016 Anon n d Discography The Olivia Tremor Control Retrieved December 31 2020 Anon February 25 1997 The 1996 Pazz amp Jop Critics Poll The Village Voice Retrieved May 9 2016 Anon November 17 2003 Top 100 Albums of the 1990s Pitchfork Retrieved March 10 2016 Anon August 6 2021 The Olivia Tremor Control Released Debut Album Music From The Unrealized Script Dusk At Cubist Castle 25 Years Ago Today Magnet Retrieved July 3 2022 Buckley Jonathan 2003 The Rough Guide to Rock Rough Guides ISBN 1 85828 457 0 Clair Adam September 21 2016 Elephant 6 amp Friends Reflect On The Legacy Of The Olivia Tremor Control s Dusk At Cubist Castle Stereogum Retrieved November 4 2022 Clair Adam 2022 Endless Endless A Lo Fi History of the Elephant 6 Mystery E book Hachette ISBN 978 0 30692 3968 Cohen Jason November 15 1996 Olivia Tremor Control Music From the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle Flydaddy The Austin Chronicle Retrieved May 9 2016 Cooper Kim 2005 In the Aeroplane Over the Sea 33 Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 0 8264 1690 X Cox Tom September 21 1996 The Olivia Tremor Control Music From The Unrealized Film Script Dusk At Cubist Castle NME Archived from the original on September 30 2000 Retrieved March 10 2016 Holmes Catherine Mantione March 27 1998 Pop Music Tremor Control shakes things up The Atlanta Journal Constitution Houle Zachary November 8 2011 The Olivia Tremor Control Reissues Dusk at Cubist Castle and Black Foliage PopMatters Retrieved November 4 2022 Kramer Michael n d Homemade Psychedelia For Modern Times The New York Times Retrieved December 30 2020 Larkin Colin n d The Olivia Tremor Control Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 531373 4 Retrieved November 12 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help LeMay Matt November 15 2011 The Olivia Tremor Control Music From The Unrealized Film Script Dusk At Cubist Castle Black Foliage Animation Music Vol 1 The A V Club Retrieved March 10 2016 Sarig Roni 2004 Olivia Tremor Control In Brackett Nathan Hoard Christian eds The New Rolling Stone Album Guide 4th ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7432 0169 8 Scapelliti Christopher November 10 2022 Watch Indie Rock Legends the Olivia Tremor Control Perform Their Infectious Signature Song Jumping Fences Guitar Player Retrieved July 31 2023 Stephens Chuck September 1996 The Olivia Tremor Control Music from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle Spin Vol 12 no 6 Thompson Paul November 17 2011 The Olivia Tremor Control Music From the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle Black Foliage Animation Music Vol 1 Pitchfork Retrieved March 10 2016 Umile Dominic March 8 2004 The Olivia Tremor Control Music From The Unrealized Film Script Dusk At Cubist Castle Reissue PopMatters Retrieved November 4 2022 Vaziri Aidin January 26 1997 Olivia Tremor Control Shakes Up The System San Francisco Examiner Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Music from the Unrealized Film Script Dusk at Cubist Castle amp oldid 1221198600, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.