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Neptune City (album)

Neptune City is an album by Nicole Atkins, released in the U.S. on October 30, 2007 by Columbia Records.[3] The album reached No. 6 on Billboard's Top Heatseekers chart.

Neptune City
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 30, 2007 (2007-10-30)
RecordedSeptember, November 2006
Varispeed Studios, Kalgerup, Sweden
Gula Studion, Malmö, Sweden
GenreChamber pop,[1] country pop[2]
LabelRed Ink/Columbia
ProducerTore Johansson
Nicole Atkins chronology
Neptune City
(2007)
Mondo Amore
(2011)

Album title Edit

Prior to the album's release, Atkins found herself at a bar her family frequented in Neptune City, New Jersey called Bilow's, thinking about what she would title her album. She pondered aloud naming the album Neptune City, almost as a counterbalance to Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J., with encouragement from the bar's patrons. "And I figured Neptune City, too, it seems so ominous," she told the Village Voice. "It sounds like very, you know, aquatic and mysterious."[4] Though several publications have suggested the album's title refers directly to her hometown, the real life Neptune City is a distinct municipality just to the east of Atkins' native Neptune, New Jersey.

Critical reception Edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AbsolutePunk(84%)[5]
Allmusic     [6]
BBC Music(positive)[7]
The Cornell Daily Sun(positive)[8]
Entertainment Weekly(B+)[9]
Music Emissions     [10]
The New Zealand Herald     [11]
PopMatters          [1]
Spin(6/10)[2]
Under the Radar(8.5/10)[12]

Neptune City was generally well received by most music critics. Katherine Fulton of Allmusic noticed that "Atkins shows on this album that she has both the capability and potential" and praised the "lush arrangements on Neptune City, which [...] showcase the depth, range, and versatility of Atkins' alto voice, not to mention her songwriting prowess".[6] Chris Jones of BBC Music wrote that Atkins "delivers glorious, over-the-top twang-drenched ballads that both romanticise her native New Jersey and yet still throw in a tough, dark heart of country noir" and described the album as "something akin to country, but also something weirdly post-modern", while praising its production and vocals.[7] Susan Frances of AbsolutePunk wrote that "the whole album is tooled with melodic patterned frescos combining orchestral fields with pop/rock elements" and added that it "does justice to the real Neptune City".[5] Mikael Wood from Entertainment Weekly described it as "heartbreak nearly at its finest — and most cosmopolitan"[9] while Joanna Hunkin of The New Zealand Herald compared it to "an intricate oil painting" and called it "a collection of curiosities, revealing a new intrigue with every listen".[11]

Michael Keefe of PopMatters found the album "big and dreamy", the arrangements "vibrant, lush, and propulsive", and stated that "the instrumentation will swoop in and carry you along for a 40-minute ride through timeless chamber pop", but also noted that "the primal force that drives Neptune City is the huge and charismatic voice of Nicole Atkins".[1] Will Miller from Music Emissions noticed that Neptune City "deals with that love/hate relationship almost everybody has with their hometown" and wrote that "with varied and lush instrumentation of strings and piano, the musical backdrops are full and rich throughout" and generally praised Atkins' vocal abilities.[10] Suzanne Baumgarten of The Cornell Daily Sun felt that Atkins "has a folk song quality that makes her otherwise pop-like style unique and truly enjoyable" and called the album "optimistic, yet utterly realistic",[8] while Under the Radar called it "a superb yesteryear sounding album".[12] The album also garnered positive reviews from independent entertainment website IndieLondon, which found it "well worth checking out",[13] and Greek webzine Avopolis, which described it as "an elegy for love".[14]

A fairly mixed review came from Stacey Anderson of Spin, who noticed that the artist "coolly distills the romanticism of '60s girl groups into dark, baleful country pop" but felt that "the songs swell and crest in identical structure, leaving her gorgeous voice [...] to battle the overproduction".[2] Jenni Cole of MusicOMH gave an unfavorable review, saying that "this really is an album that's going nowhere".[15]

Track listing Edit

All songs written and composed by Nicole Atkins, except where noted.

  1. "Maybe Tonight" – 3:16
  2. "Together We're Both Alone" – 4:18
  3. "The Way It Is" – 3:36
  4. "Cool Enough" – 5:25
  5. "War Torn" – 3:58
  6. "Love Surreal" (Atkins, Tore Johansson, Jens Lindgard, Martin Gjerstad) – 4:06
  7. "Neptune City" – 3:53
  8. "Brooklyn's on Fire!" – 3:51
  9. "Kill the Headlights" – 3:19
  10. "Party's Over" – 4:15

Neptune City Edit

The song is sung mainly from the perspective of a ghost or spirit, paying one last visit to his hometown before leaving forever to the next world.

It begins with the narrator identifying himself as a ghost looking down on his own funeral – “You can’t see me from this view, all the way down, trailing the procession.” He says he'll “hide out a few more days,” perhaps the mourning period for the remaining family, but then has to leave.

The narrator seems to wish he could have a more positive outlook on the “landscape I was born to,” ostensibly the same town where his funeral now takes place. He thinks if he looked at it differently, it could “make me new again.”

The chorus is divided between the narrator and the family left behind on Earth. In the first quatrain, the family's “hearts are singing out” for the deceased. They are so bereaved that they sing a “cemetery song”, but if they could figure out a way beyond their grief – “if we knew just what we could do” – they could stop singing the cemetery song.

The second quatrain finds the narrator assessing his current state, “sitting over Neptune City”, wistfully acknowledging how much he misses it. He has one chance to briefly return – “I’ll come down, walk around a while” – until his time is up and he's “sure [he] can never go home again."

In a 2007 interview with The Star-Ledger, Atkins indicated the last quatrain could also apply to anyone looking back with ambivalence at their hometown. “After the fact, it took on all these different meanings about not being able to feel comfortable in the place that you always thought was home.”[16]

Background Edit

Atkins told the Ledger, "I wasn't even planning on writing a song called 'Neptune City.' My sister and I were making pasta, and we were like, (sings) 'We're making pasta in Neptune City ...' Like, just kidding. And I was like, 'That (melody) sounds really cool.'"[16] The lyrics were inspired by an uncle whom she never met. Long before Atkins' birth, her mother's brother died in an accident at the age of 13. Years later, Atkins found the uncle's Yamaha learner's guitar in an attic and used it to teach herself how to play.[17]

Video Edit

The video, directed by David Simon, features fantastic scenes and dreamlike sequences set in a faded amusement area, with moving images of Atkins transposed on older still photographs. The intentional grainy and distorted look of the video evokes the old peep shows one would have found in early 20th century seaside resorts like Brighton or Atlantic City.

It opens in a meadow of tall grass (with a barely visible Atkins to the left) and pans right, past an old roadside billboard. An image of the Roman god Neptune is briefly visible on the billboard before fading to black. The camera then moves in on the image of an old amusement park separated from the meadow by a body of water.

From there, the camera zooms in on Atkins in color, transposed on a black-and-white image of the old Atlantic City Boardwalk. As she sings “I’ll be leaving this place soon,” the picture changes to an image of rapidly deteriorating film but with a statue of Neptune clearly visible in the center of the frame, a reference to the namesake location.

Later scenes show Atkins lying down across an image of Tillie and walking down a set of stairs onto the beach. As the video progresses, the images play in reverse, with the final scene returning to the meadow with the billboard and finally Atkins by the roadside before fading to black. Throughout the video, Atkins is the only person seen both in color and moving. The still photos may represent snapshots of a distant time the singer cannot bring back. They could also represent the world of the living, from which the singer is forever separated.

Personnel Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Keefe, Michael (27 November 2007). "Nicole Atkins: Neptune City". PopMatters. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  2. ^ a b c Anderson, Stacey (2008). "Nicole Atkins 'Neptune City'". Spin Media LLC. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  3. ^ "Discogs". Retrieved 2008-01-25.
  4. ^ Trucks, Rob "Nicole Atkins & the Sea: Possibly 4th Street.", villagevoice.com, January 25, 2008. Accessed on January 30, 2008
  5. ^ a b Frances, Susan (22 February 2008). "Atkins, Nicole - Neptune City". Buzz Media. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  6. ^ a b Fulton, Katherine (October 2007). "Neptune City Nicole Atkins". All Media Guide. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  7. ^ a b Jones, Chris (6 June 2008). "Nicole Atkins Neptune City Review". BBC. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  8. ^ a b Baumgarten, Suzanne (8 November 2007). . Cornell University. Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  9. ^ a b Wood, Mikael (26 October 2007). "Neptune City (2007) Nicole Atkins". Time Inc. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  10. ^ a b Miller, Will (24 January 2008). "Nicole Atkins - Neptune City". Music Emissions. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  11. ^ a b Hunkin, Joanna (5 June 2008). "Nicole Atkins - Neptune City". APN News & Media. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  12. ^ a b "Neptune City Nicole Atkins". Under the Radar. 8 June 2008. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  13. ^ Foley, Jack (8 June 2008). "Nicole Atkins - Neptune City". IndieLondon. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  14. ^ Tziritas, Stylianos (8 June 2008). . Avopolis. Archived from the original on 3 August 2008. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  15. ^ Cole, Jenni (8 June 2008). "Nicole Atkins - Neptune City (Red Ink)". musicOMH. Retrieved 13 February 2011.
  16. ^ a b Lustig, Jay. "Greetings From Neptune City, NJ", "The Star-Ledger", October 27, 2007 Accessed January 24, 2008
  17. ^ La Gorce, Tammy. "Born In New Jersey and (Now) Proud of It", The New York Times, July 29, 2007. Accessed January 18, 2008

neptune, city, album, neptune, city, album, nicole, atkins, released, october, 2007, columbia, records, album, reached, billboard, heatseekers, chart, neptune, citystudio, album, nicole, atkinsreleasedoctober, 2007, 2007, recordedseptember, november, 2006varis. Neptune City is an album by Nicole Atkins released in the U S on October 30 2007 by Columbia Records 3 The album reached No 6 on Billboard s Top Heatseekers chart Neptune CityStudio album by Nicole AtkinsReleasedOctober 30 2007 2007 10 30 RecordedSeptember November 2006Varispeed Studios Kalgerup SwedenGula Studion Malmo SwedenGenreChamber pop 1 country pop 2 LabelRed Ink ColumbiaProducerTore JohanssonNicole Atkins chronologyNeptune City 2007 Mondo Amore 2011 Contents 1 Album title 2 Critical reception 3 Track listing 3 1 Neptune City 3 1 1 Background 3 1 2 Video 4 Personnel 5 ReferencesAlbum title EditPrior to the album s release Atkins found herself at a bar her family frequented in Neptune City New Jersey called Bilow s thinking about what she would title her album She pondered aloud naming the album Neptune City almost as a counterbalance to Greetings from Asbury Park N J with encouragement from the bar s patrons And I figured Neptune City too it seems so ominous she told the Village Voice It sounds like very you know aquatic and mysterious 4 Though several publications have suggested the album s title refers directly to her hometown the real life Neptune City is a distinct municipality just to the east of Atkins native Neptune New Jersey Critical reception EditProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAbsolutePunk 84 5 Allmusic 6 BBC Music positive 7 The Cornell Daily Sun positive 8 Entertainment Weekly B 9 Music Emissions 10 The New Zealand Herald 11 PopMatters 1 Spin 6 10 2 Under the Radar 8 5 10 12 Neptune City was generally well received by most music critics Katherine Fulton of Allmusic noticed that Atkins shows on this album that she has both the capability and potential and praised the lush arrangements on Neptune City which showcase the depth range and versatility of Atkins alto voice not to mention her songwriting prowess 6 Chris Jones of BBC Music wrote that Atkins delivers glorious over the top twang drenched ballads that both romanticise her native New Jersey and yet still throw in a tough dark heart of country noir and described the album as something akin to country but also something weirdly post modern while praising its production and vocals 7 Susan Frances of AbsolutePunk wrote that the whole album is tooled with melodic patterned frescos combining orchestral fields with pop rock elements and added that it does justice to the real Neptune City 5 Mikael Wood from Entertainment Weekly described it as heartbreak nearly at its finest and most cosmopolitan 9 while Joanna Hunkin of The New Zealand Herald compared it to an intricate oil painting and called it a collection of curiosities revealing a new intrigue with every listen 11 Michael Keefe of PopMatters found the album big and dreamy the arrangements vibrant lush and propulsive and stated that the instrumentation will swoop in and carry you along for a 40 minute ride through timeless chamber pop but also noted that the primal force that drives Neptune City is the huge and charismatic voice of Nicole Atkins 1 Will Miller from Music Emissions noticed that Neptune City deals with that love hate relationship almost everybody has with their hometown and wrote that with varied and lush instrumentation of strings and piano the musical backdrops are full and rich throughout and generally praised Atkins vocal abilities 10 Suzanne Baumgarten of The Cornell Daily Sun felt that Atkins has a folk song quality that makes her otherwise pop like style unique and truly enjoyable and called the album optimistic yet utterly realistic 8 while Under the Radar called it a superb yesteryear sounding album 12 The album also garnered positive reviews from independent entertainment website IndieLondon which found it well worth checking out 13 and Greek webzine Avopolis which described it as an elegy for love 14 A fairly mixed review came from Stacey Anderson of Spin who noticed that the artist coolly distills the romanticism of 60s girl groups into dark baleful country pop but felt that the songs swell and crest in identical structure leaving her gorgeous voice to battle the overproduction 2 Jenni Cole of MusicOMH gave an unfavorable review saying that this really is an album that s going nowhere 15 Track listing EditAll songs written and composed by Nicole Atkins except where noted Maybe Tonight 3 16 Together We re Both Alone 4 18 The Way It Is 3 36 Cool Enough 5 25 War Torn 3 58 Love Surreal Atkins Tore Johansson Jens Lindgard Martin Gjerstad 4 06 Neptune City 3 53 Brooklyn s on Fire 3 51 Kill the Headlights 3 19 Party s Over 4 15Neptune City Edit The song is sung mainly from the perspective of a ghost or spirit paying one last visit to his hometown before leaving forever to the next world It begins with the narrator identifying himself as a ghost looking down on his own funeral You can t see me from this view all the way down trailing the procession He says he ll hide out a few more days perhaps the mourning period for the remaining family but then has to leave The narrator seems to wish he could have a more positive outlook on the landscape I was born to ostensibly the same town where his funeral now takes place He thinks if he looked at it differently it could make me new again The chorus is divided between the narrator and the family left behind on Earth In the first quatrain the family s hearts are singing out for the deceased They are so bereaved that they sing a cemetery song but if they could figure out a way beyond their grief if we knew just what we could do they could stop singing the cemetery song The second quatrain finds the narrator assessing his current state sitting over Neptune City wistfully acknowledging how much he misses it He has one chance to briefly return I ll come down walk around a while until his time is up and he s sure he can never go home again In a 2007 interview with The Star Ledger Atkins indicated the last quatrain could also apply to anyone looking back with ambivalence at their hometown After the fact it took on all these different meanings about not being able to feel comfortable in the place that you always thought was home 16 Background Edit Atkins told the Ledger I wasn t even planning on writing a song called Neptune City My sister and I were making pasta and we were like sings We re making pasta in Neptune City Like just kidding And I was like That melody sounds really cool 16 The lyrics were inspired by an uncle whom she never met Long before Atkins birth her mother s brother died in an accident at the age of 13 Years later Atkins found the uncle s Yamaha learner s guitar in an attic and used it to teach herself how to play 17 Video Edit The video directed by David Simon features fantastic scenes and dreamlike sequences set in a faded amusement area with moving images of Atkins transposed on older still photographs The intentional grainy and distorted look of the video evokes the old peep shows one would have found in early 20th century seaside resorts like Brighton or Atlantic City It opens in a meadow of tall grass with a barely visible Atkins to the left and pans right past an old roadside billboard An image of the Roman god Neptune is briefly visible on the billboard before fading to black The camera then moves in on the image of an old amusement park separated from the meadow by a body of water From there the camera zooms in on Atkins in color transposed on a black and white image of the old Atlantic City Boardwalk As she sings I ll be leaving this place soon the picture changes to an image of rapidly deteriorating film but with a statue of Neptune clearly visible in the center of the frame a reference to the namesake location Later scenes show Atkins lying down across an image of Tillie and walking down a set of stairs onto the beach As the video progresses the images play in reverse with the final scene returning to the meadow with the billboard and finally Atkins by the roadside before fading to black Throughout the video Atkins is the only person seen both in color and moving The still photos may represent snapshots of a distant time the singer cannot bring back They could also represent the world of the living from which the singer is forever separated Personnel EditSven Andersson flute saxophone Seth Avett liner notes David Carlsson engineer Daniel Shaolun Chen electric piano mellotron vibraphone reed organ Emil de Waal vocals Mattias Gustavsson vocals Dave Hollinghurst guitar Tore Johansson acoustic guitar bass producer slide guitar acoustic bass guitar mixing Maria Kohnke vocals Jens Lindgard bass guitar trombone Peter Lindgard percussion trumpet drums Vlado Meller mastering Daniel Mintzer drums Filip Runesson violin viola Jenny Johnson cello Andrew Scheps mixing Chris Spooner art direction Andreas Stellan vocals Ulf Turesson vocals Jennifer Tzar photographyReferences Edit a b c Keefe Michael 27 November 2007 Nicole Atkins Neptune City PopMatters Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b c Anderson Stacey 2008 Nicole Atkins Neptune City Spin Media LLC Retrieved 13 February 2011 Discogs Retrieved 2008 01 25 Trucks Rob Nicole Atkins amp the Sea Possibly 4th Street villagevoice com January 25 2008 Accessed on January 30 2008 a b Frances Susan 22 February 2008 Atkins Nicole Neptune City Buzz Media Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Fulton Katherine October 2007 Neptune City Nicole Atkins All Media Guide Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Jones Chris 6 June 2008 Nicole Atkins Neptune City Review BBC Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Baumgarten Suzanne 8 November 2007 Record Review Nicole Atkins Cornell University Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Wood Mikael 26 October 2007 Neptune City 2007 Nicole Atkins Time Inc Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Miller Will 24 January 2008 Nicole Atkins Neptune City Music Emissions Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Hunkin Joanna 5 June 2008 Nicole Atkins Neptune City APN News amp Media Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Neptune City Nicole Atkins Under the Radar 8 June 2008 Retrieved 13 February 2011 Foley Jack 8 June 2008 Nicole Atkins Neptune City IndieLondon Retrieved 13 February 2011 Tziritas Stylianos 8 June 2008 Nicole Atkins Neptune City Avopolis Archived from the original on 3 August 2008 Retrieved 13 February 2011 Cole Jenni 8 June 2008 Nicole Atkins Neptune City Red Ink musicOMH Retrieved 13 February 2011 a b Lustig Jay Greetings From Neptune City NJ The Star Ledger October 27 2007 Accessed January 24 2008 La Gorce Tammy Born In New Jersey and Now Proud of It The New York Times July 29 2007 Accessed January 18 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neptune City album amp oldid 1125157070, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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