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The Glow Pt. 2

The Glow Pt. 2 is the third studio album by American indie folk and indie rock project the Microphones. It was released on September 11, 2001,[1] through K Records and later through P.W. Elverum & Sun, Ltd. Recording was done on analog equipment at Dub Narcotic, Olympia, Washington, from May 2000 to March 2001. The album takes influences from numerous music genres such as black metal, ambient and avant-garde, as well as non-musical sources like the American drama television show Twin Peaks and primary member Phil Elverum's relationship to Khaela Maricich. Elverum was responsible for the album's production in its entirety.

The Glow Pt. 2
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 11, 2001[1]
RecordedMay 23, 2000 – March 23, 2001
StudioDub Narcotic, Olympia, Washington
Genre
Length66:38
LabelK Records
P.W. Elverum & Sun, Ltd.
ProducerPhil Elverum
The Microphones chronology
Blood
(2001)
The Glow Pt. 2
(2001)
Song Islands
(2002)

Musically, The Glow Pt. 2 diverts from the band's previous studio release It Was Hot, We Stayed in the Water, and features experimental production, alongside musical techniques and lyrics that often reference nature and the Pacific Northwest. For promotion, Elverum embarked on The Paper Opera Tour with Calvin Johnson and Khaela Maricich, before going on a solo tour of North America. In the years following its release, the album has been reissued multiple times, with the first in 2007 including a disc of bonus material. An immediate critical success, it has since appeared in multiple rankings of the best albums of the 2000s, and is considered by many music critics to be the Microphones' best work and an important release in the lo-fi genre.

Background and recording edit

 
The original recording chart for "I Want Wind To Blow".
 
Dub Narcotic Studio seen in 2013.

The Glow Pt. 2 was recorded between May 23, 2000, and March 23, 2001, at Dub Narcotic, Olympia, Washington.[2] Elverum hoped to achieve a more organic sound by recording it on a 16 track analog tape.[2][3] He would generally record the songs early in the morning, alone.[2] He wrote the songs alongside recording them, being at times accompanied by Mirah who would frequently compliment his material and predict that, "This record is going to be something special."[4][5] The Glow Pt. 2 was recorded entirely in stereo.[6]

Elverum created the distortion on the album via "running the guitar through the mic input on a thrift store cassette deck, then out the headphone jack into the amp".[7] The distorted drums were recorded by raising the volume on the microphones, particularly Sennheiser MKH 405, and using compressors.[8] The drums were recorded via multi-tracking with the snare and bass drum added after the initial recording.[8] Elverum used his Chamberlin Rhythmate 40 drum machine on The Glow Pt. 2 with the machine being credited as "Karl Blau", a friend of Elverum.[9]

The Glow Pt. 2 was influenced by black metal, ambient, and avant-garde for the first time in Elverum's career.[10] The record's tone and atmosphere were also influenced by the American drama television show Twin Peaks.[8] The cover art for The Glow Pt. 2 originated from an antique Dutch cookbook entitled Calvé-Delft's Winterboekje, which was printed from 1933–1934.[2]

Music and lyrics edit

 
Canadian indie rock band Eric's Trip influenced Elverum's use of recurring imagery and themes.[11]

The Glow Pt. 2 marked a shift in Elverum's writing to a more abstract, symbolic style from the "short, straightforward pop songs" of the Microphones' previous studio album It Was Hot, We Stayed in the Water,[6][12] although it uses "similar sounds and songwriting styles".[13] Elverum's lyrics range from highly specific to "macrocosmic" in scale.[11] The lyrics are performed in a stream of consciousness manner and frequently reference nature and the Pacific Northwest while exhibiting a sense of longing.[3][14] The songs are equally diverse, ranging from ambient pieces, to acoustic folk songs, to "expansive multitracked forces of nature",[11] with multi-tracking being utilised on songs such as "I'll Not Contain You".[10] Sudden piano stabs and abrupt rhythm and key changes are present throughout The Glow Pt. 2.[3] Elverum employs multiple unique production techniques, such as compartmentalising individual notes to separate audio tracks and arranging the tracks to perform the melody in sequence.[10] "Call-and-response" panning is featured on the song "Instrumental".[10][a]

The theme of fire is central to the album.[8][15] The fire on the artwork is meant to be a representation of "the Glow"; this was first introduced on the fourth track of It Was Hot, We Stayed in the Water, which Elverum stated was a "glowing window that you see as you are freezing to death in the snow, or the light you go into supposedly when you die". Of the presence of "the Glow" on The Glow Pt. 2, Elverum said it represents "one's inner 'life force'".[11] Themes of flesh, blood, water, wood, life, death and overcoming depression are also central to the album.[6][16]

A 17-second sample of the chorus to "I Want Wind to Blow", featuring four vocal tracks. The first track is of Elverum singing and the other three are used to form an elongated chord.[17]

The opening track "I Want Wind to Blow" was recorded on January 1, 2001.[17] Elverum wrote the melody in Philadelphia while on tour.[17] The countermelody to the song is played in the key of G major, though the main melody is played in a higher register.[17] The instrumentation for the song was performed by Elverum; he recorded the piano tracks far away from the microphone to capture the natural sounds of the piano in the studio, which would otherwise not be picked up.[17] The guitar sections were intended to resemble the sound of water by miking the amp and strings while two stereos were used to create stereophonic sound.[17] The song records Elverum scraping a snare drum.[17]

The title "I Want Wind to Blow" was explained by Elverum: "I want crazy events to happen to me. I'm tired of gray. Give me black or white."[18] His relationship to Khaela Maricich and its subsequent dissolution are mentioned on the song with the opening lyrics referencing their breakup, the changing weather of the time (with the weather serving as a metaphor for his emotions), and their Beach Boys cover band The Thunder Clouds.[11][17]

 
Foghorns, whose sound is a recurring motif.

Elverum explains that the title track is about the desire to wallow in self pity: "Being annoyed at your heart for still beating."[19] It features the line "my blood flows harshly," which Elverum holds for 14 seconds.[3] Dan Hancox of The Guardian compared Elverum's mood on the song to that of a "disaster survivor".[3] "The album's third track, "The Moon", features acoustic guitar chords alongside Elverum whispering lyrics, with him having found the inspiration for the song in his routine nightly walks.[11] The first song entitled "Instrumental" features finger-snaps.[20] The foghorn is a recurring motif throughout The Glow Pt. 2. "Map" opens with a brief interlude that consists of a foghorn, which leads into distorted organs, a kick drum, and vocals.[21] The track finishes in the same manner it starts, with the sound of a foghorn.[21] The songs "I'll Not Contain You" and "I Felt Your Shape" discuss the "impossible desire to hold on to fleeting things". Elverum stated that "I Felt Your Shape" is about hugging someone in a sensitive empathetic manner instead of a possessive manner.[11]

"I Felt My Size" opens with atmospheric noise and chaotic guitar strumming.[21] It then transitions to a simplistic melody accompanied by metaphorical lyrics, childlike vocals, synths, pianos and double-timed drums, before concluding with a foghorn.[21] It is followed by “Samurai Sword”, a heavier track which has been described as a “furious drum storm”.[11] The final song "My Warm Blood" is an ambient composition, which resembles the opener "I Want Wind to Blow".[11] The song ends with the sound of Elverum's heartbeat.[6] It is connected to the opening track "I. The Sun" "on the Microphones' fourth studio album Mount Eerie (2003).[15]

Release and promotion edit

 
Calvin Johnson (pictured in the middle) playing in 2002 at Dub Narcotic where Elverum recorded the album.

After releasing the album on September 11, 2001 (the same day as the September 11 attacks),[1] Elverum went on The Paper Opera Tour alongside Calvin Johnson and Khaela Maricich.[22][23][24] The tour encompassed North America and Europe, with the three playing in venues that included a women's club on the Jersey Shore, a historic Boston movie theater, and an art studio in Washington D.C.[22] The Paper Opera Tour featured short plays, dance routines, and "human simulations of the solar system"; audience participation was a major factor of the tour.[22] Elverum went on a six-week long tour in North America by himself afterwards.[8] In 2019, Elverum performed the title track at What The Heck Fest.[25]

The Glow Pt. 2 has been reissued multiple times. The first reissue was in 2007 by K Records with a collection of then-unreleased songs and versions of previously released songs. The collection was titled Other Songs & Destroyed Versions.[4] The album was later reissued in 2008 due to being out of print on CD and vinyl.[26] The album was again reissued in 2013 on July 9, without the extra collection of songs. The album was released under his label P. W. Elverum & Sun, Ltd.[27] Due to K Records failure to properly bookkeep, it is unknown how many copies of The Glow Pt. 2 have been sold.[28]

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Contemporaneous reviews
(published in 2001–2003)
Review scores
SourceRating
Pitchfork9.2/10[6]
Stylus MagazineA−[29]

The Glow Pt. 2 was met with generally positive reviews from contemporary music critics. Dave Heaton of PopMatters described the Microphones' approach to music as "free and idiosyncratic", while calling the approach "constrained by few boundaries, a fact that allows them to travel through various unique musical lands".[24] Stylus Magazine's Tyler Martin asserted that the Microphones "spew innovation every second of this disc" and noted that the album "promises something you have never heard before and delivers it, perhaps more than you'd expect".[29]

Craig Dunsmuir of Exclaim! stated that the album is an example of "where the cliché of 'hearing new things in it every time you listen' actually rings true". He continued, describing the album as having "substantial quality".[30] Matt LeMay of Pitchfork called the album an "alive" and "sprawling, swirling composition", while stating that "parts of The Glow Pt. 2 are absolutely breathtaking" due to its stereoscopic enhancements.[6] LeMay felt that the album "exceeds even its predecessor in capturing the simultaneous wrath and fragility of nature", and praised the title track as being "the single most breathtaking song on the album".[6] Pitchfork later ranked it as the best album of 2001.[31] According to Christopher Roberts of Under the Radar, The Glow Pt. 2 "was one of the most acclaimed and beloved indie rock albums at the start of the millennium".[32]

Legacy edit

Professional ratings
Retrospective reviews
(published after 2003)
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [33]
Consequence of Sound     [34]
Pitchfork (2008)9.3/10[35]
PopMatters9/10[36]
Under the Radar9/10[37]
 
American rapper Lil Peep sampled the songs "(Something)", "Headless Horseman", and "I'll Not Contain You".[b]

Retrospective reviews of The Glow Pt. 2 have expressed stronger general critical acclaim for the album. It has since become a cult classic, ranking as one of Elverum's most critically acclaimed and popular albums; considered by many to be his best work and one of the best lo-fi albums.[38][39][40] However the album's status as "Elverum's masterpiece" has in later years been questioned.[41] According to First Order Historians, the release of The Glow Pt. 2 "created a tidal wave of buzz in the indie community".[42] Konstantinos Pappis of Our Culture Mag described the album as "seminal", while Daniel Mescher called it a "widely regarded indie pop classic".[43][44] Grayson Haver Currin from Bandcamp viewed The Glow Pt. 2, as an important release in Elverum's career, stating that it "began to make the Microphones an indie rock commodity".[5] Aquarium Drunkard, and Thomas Britt of PopMatters also saw the album as important for Elverum's career, viewing it as the culmination of his work as part of the Microphones, with Britt writing that "The introspective lyrics and rough, yet complex, sonic textures of Phil Elverum's Microphones output reached an unparalleled peak with The Glow Pt. 2." On a similar note, Aquarium Drunkard calling it a "blueprint for multiple artists".[14][45]

American rapper Lil Peep sampled the songs "(Something)", "Headless Horseman" and "I'll Not Contain You".[46][b] Canadian record producer Ryan Hemsworth sampled "Instrumental" in a mash-up with Three Six Mafia’s "Late Nite Tip" (1996).[47][a] American electronic pop duo Sylvan Esso's song "The Glow" (2017) is centered around The Glow Pt. 2, which was one of the first albums that lead singer Amelia Meath "really loved".[48] American singer-songwriter Kevin Morby's third studio album Singing Saw (2016) was inspired by The Glow Pt. 2, taking inspiration from the title track in particular.[49] Fellow singer-songwriter David Longstreth cited it as one of the best albums of the 2000s.[50] American musician Jack Tatum of Wild Nothing noted that the album "challenged my whole notion of what recorded music was supposed to be",[51] with him calling it one of his favourite albums and "The Moon" his favourite song.[52]

In a review of the album's 2008 reissue, Brian Howe of Pitchfork stated that The Glow Pt. 2 remained Elverum's "crowning achievement" and that "seven years of imitation have done nothing to dull its impact—it sounds as unaccountably grand now as it did in 2001".[35] Brock Thiessen of Exclaim! described the album as "a brave new world where solar noise bursts over sprawling epics of the most intimate nature", and stated that "it's clear age hasn't tainted the kaleidoscopic Glow Pt. 2 in the least".[53] Under the Radar writer Wendy Lynch praised the album and labelled the Microphones as "one of the most original, interesting bands to come out in the last 3 years".[37] Heather Phares of AllMusic stated that "it's The Glow, Pt. 2's deep, nearly spiritual yearning that makes it the Microphones' most compelling album to date".[33] Eric Grandy of The Stranger called the album "the apex of [Elverum]'s songwriting skill."[11] In 2012, Corey Beasley included the album at number four on a list dedicated to ranking Pitchfork's number one albums from 1996-2011, calling the album Elverum's "creative peak".[54]

After a second reissue of The Glow Pt. 2 in 2013, Colin Joyce of Consequence of Sound hailed the album as "a masterwork of sequencing as it bleeds and blends from track to track".[34] In The Guardian's "Hidden treasures" column, Hancox described the album as "a masterstroke" and "a millennial Daydream Nation".[3]

 
American electronic pop duo Sylvan Esso's song "The Glow" (2017) is centered around The Glow Pt. 2.

Stephen Krock of That Music Magazine called The Glow Pt. 2 "ingenious" and the Microphones' "definitive work".[55] L.A. Record's Cypress Marrs called the album a definitive release in the indie folk genre.[56] Adam Nelson of The Line of Best Fit lauded The Glow Pt. 2 as an "essential work of modern indie",[57] while Stereogum's retrospective feature on it stated that the album's "bond with listeners, as individuals" surpasses its critical success.[58] In the years since release, The Glow Pt. 2 has been included on numerous retrospective lists. Pitchfork included it on their list of the best albums from 2000–2004 and of the 2000s decade, and their ranking of the best indie rock albums from Pacific Northwest artists.[59][60][61] The website's readers also ranked the album as one of the best from 1996 to 2011.[62] Stylus Magazine included it on their list of the best albums from 2000 to 2005.[63] Cokemachineglow, Stereogum and Tiny Mix Tapes all included The Glow Pt. 2 on their lists of the best albums of the 2000s.[64][65][66] In 2019, The Guardian ranked the album as one of the best albums of the 21st century.[67] Spin included it on their list of the best albums from 1985–2014.[68]

 
American singer-songwriter Kevin Morby's third studio album Singing Saw was inspired by The Glow Pt. 2.

Jason Lipshutz of Billboard chose "Instrumental", the album's sixth track, as one of the "greatest interludes of all time".[20] Donovan Farley of Willamette Week chose "I Want Wind to Blow" and "The Glow Pt. 2" as two of Elverum's "essential" songs; Morgan Enos chose "Headless Horseman" as one of Elverum's essential songs for Billboard.[69][70] Eric Hill from Exclaim! included The Glow Pt. 2 in a ranking of Elverum's "essential" albums, as did Ian Gormley.[71][23] Elverum was grateful for the attention the album had received but was disillusioned with the "canonization" the album gathered from music publications, stating the idea that "albums are 'good' or 'bad' or 'essential' or not is a total myth that can usually be purchased by getting a more expensive publicist".[4] His fifth studio album as a part of the Microphones name, Microphones in 2020, released in 2020, made direct references to The Glow Pt. 2.[72]

Track listing edit

The Glow Pt. 2 track listing
No.TitleLength
1."I Want Wind to Blow"5:32
2."The Glow Pt. 2"4:58
3."The Moon"5:16
4."Headless Horseman"3:08
5."My Roots Are Strong and Deep"1:53
6."Instrumental"1:38
7."The Mansion"3:52
8."(something)"1:38
9."(something)"2:42
10."I'll Not Contain You"2:50
11."The Gleam Pt. 2"1:57
12."Map"5:00
13."You'll Be in the Air"2:41
14."I Want to Be Cold"1:41
15."I Am Bored"1:36
16."I Felt My Size"2:24
17."Instrumental"1:52
18."I Felt Your Shape"1:54
19."Samurai Sword"4:07
20."My Warm Blood"9:28
Total length:66:38

Other Songs & Destroyed Versions edit

Other Songs & Destroyed Versions
 
Compilation album by
Released2007
Length43:08
LabelK Records

The 2007 reissue of The Glow Pt. 2 included a second disc, Other Songs & Destroyed Versions, which contains 20 additional tracks that were composed during and after the recording of the album. The term "destroyed version" refers to Elverum isolating and "unmixing" the songs that appeared on The Glow Pt. 2 to aid "the feeling of the album as a cohesive thing".[2][4][26]

Music and lyrics edit

"Where Lies My Tarp?" features lyrical metaphors, alongside guitars and drumming.[11] "I Want the Wind to Blow (Backwards)" takes influence from dub music as well as featuring a dial-noise throughout the song.[36] The lyrics, including those on "I'm Like You, Tree", continue the references to nature established on The Glow Pt. 2.[35]

Critical reception edit

Thiessen of Exclaim! described Other Songs & Destroyed Versions as essential.[53] Howe asserted that while "none of the new lyrics clarify the overarching story", the new tracks on the album "reveal a few more glimpses of a distant, haunting world that's all the more alluring for its incompleteness".[35] Writing for PopMatters, Dan Raper stated that "Microphones fans will find Other Songs & Destroyed Versions more than worth the investment."[36]

Grandy wrote that "the alternate versions reveal hidden dimensions to the album's songs", giving particular praise to the song "Where Lies My Tarp?".[11]

In a mixed review, John Lingan of Splice Today wrote: "I can’t imagine anyone but a long-since converted Microphones nut sifting through this material." However, he praised "Where Lies My Tarp?" and "I Hope You Wish You’d Die".[73]

Track listing edit

Other Songs & Destroyed Versions track listing
No.TitleLength
1."Where Lies My Tarp?"3:48
2."I Felt My Size" (acoustic)1:52
3."I Hope You Wish You'd Die"2:18
4."I'm Like You, Tree"1:14
5."The Glow pt. 2 (sequel)"1:47
6."We're Here to Listen"3:27
7."Sleepy Hollow"1:19
8."Lanterns" (version)2:06
9."Map/Moon" (version)1:31
10."The Glow Pt. 2" (version)6:12
11."I Want the Wind to Blow" (backwards)4:18
12."Instrumental" (version)0:25
13."The Moon" (version)3:46
14."Samurai Sword" (version)1:25
15."The Gleam pt. 2" (version)2:36
16."My Roots Are Strong and Deep" (version)0:23
17."I Felt My Size" (version)1:26
18."My Warm Blood" (humming)0:22
19."You'll Be in the Air" (version)0:59
20."The Mooooooon" (version)1:54
Total length:43:08

Personnel edit

Credits are adapted from The Glow Pt. 2 liner notes, AllMusic, and the stems available as part of the Microphones' Completely Everything box set.[2][74]

  • Phil Elverum – guitar, vocals, most instruments
  • Karl Blau – engineer, alto saxophone (3)
  • Khaela Maricich – engineer, vocals (12, 16)
  • Kyle Field – engineer, vocals (12)
  • Jacob Navarro – engineer
  • Eddy Blau – engineer
  • Dave Matthies – engineer
  • Nate Ashley – engineer
  • Jenn-Kliese – engineer
  • John Golden – mastering
  • Leo Visser – artwork

Release history edit

Release dates and formats for "The Glow Pt. 2"
Region Date Format Label(s) Ref.
United States September 11, 2001 CD/LP
[1]
2007 Deluxe double CD [4]
April 4, 2008 [26]
July 9, 2013 Double LP [27]
Japan April 15, 2017 Deluxe double CD
  • 7e.p.
  • P. W . Elverum & Sun, Ltd.
[75]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Citation does not specfiy which (Instrumental).
  2. ^ a b Citation does not specify which (something).

References edit

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  3. ^ a b c d e f Hancox, Dan (March 13, 2013). "Hidden treasures: The Microphones – The Glow Pt 2". The Guardian. from the original on September 26, 2015. Retrieved September 27, 2015.
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glow, third, studio, album, american, indie, folk, indie, rock, project, microphones, released, september, 2001, through, records, later, through, elverum, recording, done, analog, equipment, narcotic, olympia, washington, from, 2000, march, 2001, album, takes. The Glow Pt 2 is the third studio album by American indie folk and indie rock project the Microphones It was released on September 11 2001 1 through K Records and later through P W Elverum amp Sun Ltd Recording was done on analog equipment at Dub Narcotic Olympia Washington from May 2000 to March 2001 The album takes influences from numerous music genres such as black metal ambient and avant garde as well as non musical sources like the American drama television show Twin Peaks and primary member Phil Elverum s relationship to Khaela Maricich Elverum was responsible for the album s production in its entirety The Glow Pt 2Studio album by the MicrophonesReleasedSeptember 11 2001 1 RecordedMay 23 2000 March 23 2001StudioDub Narcotic Olympia WashingtonGenreLo fi indie folk ambient noise rock avant folkLength66 38LabelK RecordsP W Elverum amp Sun Ltd ProducerPhil ElverumThe Microphones chronologyBlood 2001 The Glow Pt 2 2001 Song Islands 2002 Musically The Glow Pt 2 diverts from the band s previous studio release It Was Hot We Stayed in the Water and features experimental production alongside musical techniques and lyrics that often reference nature and the Pacific Northwest For promotion Elverum embarked on The Paper Opera Tour with Calvin Johnson and Khaela Maricich before going on a solo tour of North America In the years following its release the album has been reissued multiple times with the first in 2007 including a disc of bonus material An immediate critical success it has since appeared in multiple rankings of the best albums of the 2000s and is considered by many music critics to be the Microphones best work and an important release in the lo fi genre Contents 1 Background and recording 2 Music and lyrics 3 Release and promotion 4 Critical reception 5 Legacy 6 Track listing 7 Other Songs amp Destroyed Versions 7 1 Music and lyrics 7 2 Critical reception 7 3 Track listing 8 Personnel 9 Release history 10 Notes 11 ReferencesBackground and recording edit nbsp The original recording chart for I Want Wind To Blow nbsp Dub Narcotic Studio seen in 2013 The Glow Pt 2 was recorded between May 23 2000 and March 23 2001 at Dub Narcotic Olympia Washington 2 Elverum hoped to achieve a more organic sound by recording it on a 16 track analog tape 2 3 He would generally record the songs early in the morning alone 2 He wrote the songs alongside recording them being at times accompanied by Mirah who would frequently compliment his material and predict that This record is going to be something special 4 5 The Glow Pt 2 was recorded entirely in stereo 6 Elverum created the distortion on the album via running the guitar through the mic input on a thrift store cassette deck then out the headphone jack into the amp 7 The distorted drums were recorded by raising the volume on the microphones particularly Sennheiser MKH 405 and using compressors 8 The drums were recorded via multi tracking with the snare and bass drum added after the initial recording 8 Elverum used his Chamberlin Rhythmate 40 drum machine on The Glow Pt 2 with the machine being credited as Karl Blau a friend of Elverum 9 The Glow Pt 2 was influenced by black metal ambient and avant garde for the first time in Elverum s career 10 The record s tone and atmosphere were also influenced by the American drama television show Twin Peaks 8 The cover art for The Glow Pt 2 originated from an antique Dutch cookbook entitled Calve Delft s Winterboekje which was printed from 1933 1934 2 Music and lyrics edit nbsp Canadian indie rock band Eric s Trip influenced Elverum s use of recurring imagery and themes 11 The Glow Pt 2 marked a shift in Elverum s writing to a more abstract symbolic style from the short straightforward pop songs of the Microphones previous studio album It Was Hot We Stayed in the Water 6 12 although it uses similar sounds and songwriting styles 13 Elverum s lyrics range from highly specific to macrocosmic in scale 11 The lyrics are performed in a stream of consciousness manner and frequently reference nature and the Pacific Northwest while exhibiting a sense of longing 3 14 The songs are equally diverse ranging from ambient pieces to acoustic folk songs to expansive multitracked forces of nature 11 with multi tracking being utilised on songs such as I ll Not Contain You 10 Sudden piano stabs and abrupt rhythm and key changes are present throughout The Glow Pt 2 3 Elverum employs multiple unique production techniques such as compartmentalising individual notes to separate audio tracks and arranging the tracks to perform the melody in sequence 10 Call and response panning is featured on the song Instrumental 10 a The theme of fire is central to the album 8 15 The fire on the artwork is meant to be a representation of the Glow this was first introduced on the fourth track of It Was Hot We Stayed in the Water which Elverum stated was a glowing window that you see as you are freezing to death in the snow or the light you go into supposedly when you die Of the presence of the Glow on The Glow Pt 2 Elverum said it represents one s inner life force 11 Themes of flesh blood water wood life death and overcoming depression are also central to the album 6 16 source source A 17 second sample of the chorus to I Want Wind to Blow featuring four vocal tracks The first track is of Elverum singing and the other three are used to form an elongated chord 17 The opening track I Want Wind to Blow was recorded on January 1 2001 17 Elverum wrote the melody in Philadelphia while on tour 17 The countermelody to the song is played in the key of G major though the main melody is played in a higher register 17 The instrumentation for the song was performed by Elverum he recorded the piano tracks far away from the microphone to capture the natural sounds of the piano in the studio which would otherwise not be picked up 17 The guitar sections were intended to resemble the sound of water by miking the amp and strings while two stereos were used to create stereophonic sound 17 The song records Elverum scraping a snare drum 17 The title I Want Wind to Blow was explained by Elverum I want crazy events to happen to me I m tired of gray Give me black or white 18 His relationship to Khaela Maricich and its subsequent dissolution are mentioned on the song with the opening lyrics referencing their breakup the changing weather of the time with the weather serving as a metaphor for his emotions and their Beach Boys cover band The Thunder Clouds 11 17 nbsp Foghorns whose sound is a recurring motif Elverum explains that the title track is about the desire to wallow in self pity Being annoyed at your heart for still beating 19 It features the line my blood flows harshly which Elverum holds for 14 seconds 3 Dan Hancox of The Guardian compared Elverum s mood on the song to that of a disaster survivor 3 The album s third track The Moon features acoustic guitar chords alongside Elverum whispering lyrics with him having found the inspiration for the song in his routine nightly walks 11 The first song entitled Instrumental features finger snaps 20 The foghorn is a recurring motif throughout The Glow Pt 2 Map opens with a brief interlude that consists of a foghorn which leads into distorted organs a kick drum and vocals 21 The track finishes in the same manner it starts with the sound of a foghorn 21 The songs I ll Not Contain You and I Felt Your Shape discuss the impossible desire to hold on to fleeting things Elverum stated that I Felt Your Shape is about hugging someone in a sensitive empathetic manner instead of a possessive manner 11 I Felt My Size opens with atmospheric noise and chaotic guitar strumming 21 It then transitions to a simplistic melody accompanied by metaphorical lyrics childlike vocals synths pianos and double timed drums before concluding with a foghorn 21 It is followed by Samurai Sword a heavier track which has been described as a furious drum storm 11 The final song My Warm Blood is an ambient composition which resembles the opener I Want Wind to Blow 11 The song ends with the sound of Elverum s heartbeat 6 It is connected to the opening track I The Sun on the Microphones fourth studio album Mount Eerie 2003 15 Release and promotion edit nbsp Calvin Johnson pictured in the middle playing in 2002 at Dub Narcotic where Elverum recorded the album After releasing the album on September 11 2001 the same day as the September 11 attacks 1 Elverum went on The Paper Opera Tour alongside Calvin Johnson and Khaela Maricich 22 23 24 The tour encompassed North America and Europe with the three playing in venues that included a women s club on the Jersey Shore a historic Boston movie theater and an art studio in Washington D C 22 The Paper Opera Tour featured short plays dance routines and human simulations of the solar system audience participation was a major factor of the tour 22 Elverum went on a six week long tour in North America by himself afterwards 8 In 2019 Elverum performed the title track at What The Heck Fest 25 The Glow Pt 2 has been reissued multiple times The first reissue was in 2007 by K Records with a collection of then unreleased songs and versions of previously released songs The collection was titled Other Songs amp Destroyed Versions 4 The album was later reissued in 2008 due to being out of print on CD and vinyl 26 The album was again reissued in 2013 on July 9 without the extra collection of songs The album was released under his label P W Elverum amp Sun Ltd 27 Due to K Records failure to properly bookkeep it is unknown how many copies of The Glow Pt 2 have been sold 28 Critical reception editProfessional ratingsContemporaneous reviews published in 2001 2003 Review scoresSourceRatingPitchfork9 2 10 6 Stylus MagazineA 29 The Glow Pt 2 was met with generally positive reviews from contemporary music critics Dave Heaton of PopMatters described the Microphones approach to music as free and idiosyncratic while calling the approach constrained by few boundaries a fact that allows them to travel through various unique musical lands 24 Stylus Magazine s Tyler Martin asserted that the Microphones spew innovation every second of this disc and noted that the album promises something you have never heard before and delivers it perhaps more than you d expect 29 Craig Dunsmuir of Exclaim stated that the album is an example of where the cliche of hearing new things in it every time you listen actually rings true He continued describing the album as having substantial quality 30 Matt LeMay of Pitchfork called the album an alive and sprawling swirling composition while stating that parts of The Glow Pt 2 are absolutely breathtaking due to its stereoscopic enhancements 6 LeMay felt that the album exceeds even its predecessor in capturing the simultaneous wrath and fragility of nature and praised the title track as being the single most breathtaking song on the album 6 Pitchfork later ranked it as the best album of 2001 31 According to Christopher Roberts of Under the Radar The Glow Pt 2 was one of the most acclaimed and beloved indie rock albums at the start of the millennium 32 Legacy editProfessional ratingsRetrospective reviews published after 2003 Review scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 33 Consequence of Sound nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 34 Pitchfork 2008 9 3 10 35 PopMatters9 10 36 Under the Radar9 10 37 nbsp American rapper Lil Peep sampled the songs Something Headless Horseman and I ll Not Contain You b Retrospective reviews of The Glow Pt 2 have expressed stronger general critical acclaim for the album It has since become a cult classic ranking as one of Elverum s most critically acclaimed and popular albums considered by many to be his best work and one of the best lo fi albums 38 39 40 However the album s status as Elverum s masterpiece has in later years been questioned 41 According to First Order Historians the release of The Glow Pt 2 created a tidal wave of buzz in the indie community 42 Konstantinos Pappis of Our Culture Mag described the album as seminal while Daniel Mescher called it a widely regarded indie pop classic 43 44 Grayson Haver Currin from Bandcamp viewed The Glow Pt 2 as an important release in Elverum s career stating that it began to make the Microphones an indie rock commodity 5 Aquarium Drunkard and Thomas Britt of PopMatters also saw the album as important for Elverum s career viewing it as the culmination of his work as part of the Microphones with Britt writing that The introspective lyrics and rough yet complex sonic textures of Phil Elverum s Microphones output reached an unparalleled peak with The Glow Pt 2 On a similar note Aquarium Drunkard calling it a blueprint for multiple artists 14 45 American rapper Lil Peep sampled the songs Something Headless Horseman and I ll Not Contain You 46 b Canadian record producer Ryan Hemsworth sampled Instrumental in a mash up with Three Six Mafia s Late Nite Tip 1996 47 a American electronic pop duo Sylvan Esso s song The Glow 2017 is centered around The Glow Pt 2 which was one of the first albums that lead singer Amelia Meath really loved 48 American singer songwriter Kevin Morby s third studio album Singing Saw 2016 was inspired by The Glow Pt 2 taking inspiration from the title track in particular 49 Fellow singer songwriter David Longstreth cited it as one of the best albums of the 2000s 50 American musician Jack Tatum of Wild Nothing noted that the album challenged my whole notion of what recorded music was supposed to be 51 with him calling it one of his favourite albums and The Moon his favourite song 52 In a review of the album s 2008 reissue Brian Howe of Pitchfork stated that The Glow Pt 2 remained Elverum s crowning achievement and that seven years of imitation have done nothing to dull its impact it sounds as unaccountably grand now as it did in 2001 35 Brock Thiessen of Exclaim described the album as a brave new world where solar noise bursts over sprawling epics of the most intimate nature and stated that it s clear age hasn t tainted the kaleidoscopic Glow Pt 2 in the least 53 Under the Radar writer Wendy Lynch praised the album and labelled the Microphones as one of the most original interesting bands to come out in the last 3 years 37 Heather Phares of AllMusic stated that it s The Glow Pt 2 s deep nearly spiritual yearning that makes it the Microphones most compelling album to date 33 Eric Grandy of The Stranger called the album the apex of Elverum s songwriting skill 11 In 2012 Corey Beasley included the album at number four on a list dedicated to ranking Pitchfork s number one albums from 1996 2011 calling the album Elverum s creative peak 54 After a second reissue of The Glow Pt 2 in 2013 Colin Joyce of Consequence of Sound hailed the album as a masterwork of sequencing as it bleeds and blends from track to track 34 In The Guardian s Hidden treasures column Hancox described the album as a masterstroke and a millennial Daydream Nation 3 nbsp American electronic pop duo Sylvan Esso s song The Glow 2017 is centered around The Glow Pt 2 Stephen Krock of That Music Magazine called The Glow Pt 2 ingenious and the Microphones definitive work 55 L A Record s Cypress Marrs called the album a definitive release in the indie folk genre 56 Adam Nelson of The Line of Best Fit lauded The Glow Pt 2 as an essential work of modern indie 57 while Stereogum s retrospective feature on it stated that the album s bond with listeners as individuals surpasses its critical success 58 In the years since release The Glow Pt 2 has been included on numerous retrospective lists Pitchfork included it on their list of the best albums from 2000 2004 and of the 2000s decade and their ranking of the best indie rock albums from Pacific Northwest artists 59 60 61 The website s readers also ranked the album as one of the best from 1996 to 2011 62 Stylus Magazine included it on their list of the best albums from 2000 to 2005 63 Cokemachineglow Stereogum and Tiny Mix Tapes all included The Glow Pt 2 on their lists of the best albums of the 2000s 64 65 66 In 2019 The Guardian ranked the album as one of the best albums of the 21st century 67 Spin included it on their list of the best albums from 1985 2014 68 nbsp American singer songwriter Kevin Morby s third studio album Singing Saw was inspired by The Glow Pt 2 Jason Lipshutz of Billboard chose Instrumental the album s sixth track as one of the greatest interludes of all time 20 Donovan Farley of Willamette Week chose I Want Wind to Blow and The Glow Pt 2 as two of Elverum s essential songs Morgan Enos chose Headless Horseman as one of Elverum s essential songs for Billboard 69 70 Eric Hill from Exclaim included The Glow Pt 2 in a ranking of Elverum s essential albums as did Ian Gormley 71 23 Elverum was grateful for the attention the album had received but was disillusioned with the canonization the album gathered from music publications stating the idea that albums are good or bad or essential or not is a total myth that can usually be purchased by getting a more expensive publicist 4 His fifth studio album as a part of the Microphones name Microphones in 2020 released in 2020 made direct references to The Glow Pt 2 72 Track listing editThe Glow Pt 2 track listingNo TitleLength1 I Want Wind to Blow 5 322 The Glow Pt 2 4 583 The Moon 5 164 Headless Horseman 3 085 My Roots Are Strong and Deep 1 536 Instrumental 1 387 The Mansion 3 528 something 1 389 something 2 4210 I ll Not Contain You 2 5011 The Gleam Pt 2 1 5712 Map 5 0013 You ll Be in the Air 2 4114 I Want to Be Cold 1 4115 I Am Bored 1 3616 I Felt My Size 2 2417 Instrumental 1 5218 I Felt Your Shape 1 5419 Samurai Sword 4 0720 My Warm Blood 9 28Total length 66 38Other Songs amp Destroyed Versions editOther Songs amp Destroyed Versions nbsp Compilation album by the MicrophonesReleased2007Length43 08LabelK RecordsThe 2007 reissue of The Glow Pt 2 included a second disc Other Songs amp Destroyed Versions which contains 20 additional tracks that were composed during and after the recording of the album The term destroyed version refers to Elverum isolating and unmixing the songs that appeared on The Glow Pt 2 to aid the feeling of the album as a cohesive thing 2 4 26 Music and lyrics edit Where Lies My Tarp features lyrical metaphors alongside guitars and drumming 11 I Want the Wind to Blow Backwards takes influence from dub music as well as featuring a dial noise throughout the song 36 The lyrics including those on I m Like You Tree continue the references to nature established on The Glow Pt 2 35 Critical reception edit Thiessen of Exclaim described Other Songs amp Destroyed Versions as essential 53 Howe asserted that while none of the new lyrics clarify the overarching story the new tracks on the album reveal a few more glimpses of a distant haunting world that s all the more alluring for its incompleteness 35 Writing for PopMatters Dan Raper stated that Microphones fans will find Other Songs amp Destroyed Versions more than worth the investment 36 Grandy wrote that the alternate versions reveal hidden dimensions to the album s songs giving particular praise to the song Where Lies My Tarp 11 In a mixed review John Lingan of Splice Today wrote I can t imagine anyone but a long since converted Microphones nut sifting through this material However he praised Where Lies My Tarp and I Hope You Wish You d Die 73 Track listing edit Other Songs amp Destroyed Versions track listingNo TitleLength1 Where Lies My Tarp 3 482 I Felt My Size acoustic 1 523 I Hope You Wish You d Die 2 184 I m Like You Tree 1 145 The Glow pt 2 sequel 1 476 We re Here to Listen 3 277 Sleepy Hollow 1 198 Lanterns version 2 069 Map Moon version 1 3110 The Glow Pt 2 version 6 1211 I Want the Wind to Blow backwards 4 1812 Instrumental version 0 2513 The Moon version 3 4614 Samurai Sword version 1 2515 The Gleam pt 2 version 2 3616 My Roots Are Strong and Deep version 0 2317 I Felt My Size version 1 2618 My Warm Blood humming 0 2219 You ll Be in the Air version 0 5920 The Mooooooon version 1 54Total length 43 08Personnel editCredits are adapted from The Glow Pt 2 liner notes AllMusic and the stems available as part of the Microphones Completely Everything box set 2 74 Phil Elverum guitar vocals most instruments Karl Blau engineer alto saxophone 3 Khaela Maricich engineer vocals 12 16 Kyle Field engineer vocals 12 Jacob Navarro engineer Eddy Blau engineer Dave Matthies engineer Nate Ashley engineer Jenn Kliese engineer John Golden mastering Leo Visser artworkRelease history editRelease dates and formats for The Glow Pt 2 Region Date Format Label s Ref United States September 11 2001 CD LP K RecordsP W Elverum amp Sun Ltd 1 2007 Deluxe double CD 4 April 4 2008 26 July 9 2013 Double LP 27 Japan April 15 2017 Deluxe double CD 7e p P W Elverum amp Sun Ltd 75 Notes edit a b Citation does not specfiy which Instrumental a b Citation does not specify which something References edit a b c d the Glow pt 2 by the Microphones P W Elverum and Sun P W Elverum and Sun Retrieved May 24 2021 a b c d e f Elverum Phil 2001 The Glow Pt 2 Media notes K Records a b c d e f Hancox Dan March 13 2013 Hidden treasures The Microphones The Glow Pt 2 The Guardian Archived from the original on September 26 2015 Retrieved September 27 2015 a b c d e Interview Phil Elverum of The Microphones and Mount Eerie discusses the reissue of his lo fi masterpiece The Glow Pt 2 PDF Manik Music July 25 2013 Archived PDF from the original on October 15 2020 Retrieved May 12 2020 a b Haver Currin Grayson August 7 2020 An In Depth Guide to the Microphones Bandcamp Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Retrieved August 25 2020 a b c d e f g LeMay Matt September 10 2001 The Microphones The Glow Pt 2 Pitchfork Archived from the original on February 18 2012 Retrieved September 26 2015 Elverum Phil Response to a letter P W Elverum amp Sun Archived from the original on July 17 2017 Retrieved May 14 2020 a b c d e sweet thunder microphones interview sweetthunder org August 8 2001 Archived from the original on August 27 2017 Retrieved May 15 2020 Handley Joel May 13 2018 Mount Eerie s Phil Elverum Is Selling His Rare Chamberlin Rhythmate on Reverb Reverb com Archived from the original on March 13 2020 Retrieved May 16 2020 a b c d Tompkins Nathan August 22 2017 Dissecting Phil Elverum Part I Introduction The Microphones Culture Fly Archived from the original on August 30 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l Grandy Eric April 10 2008 Searching for the Source of the Microphones Masterpiece The Stranger Archived from the original on September 24 2019 Retrieved May 14 2020 Mattox Brendan September 1 2015 Episode 1 Between Two Elverums Mount Eerie Stories About Music Archived from the original on September 1 2018 Retrieved May 14 2020 Alexander Colin Benton Dave September 10 2013 A very Spook Houses guide to The Microphones reissues Impose Archived from the original on July 24 2020 Retrieved July 23 2020 a b Decade The Microphones The Glow Pt 2 2001 Aquarium Drunkard October 15 2009 Archived from the original on August 16 2017 Retrieved August 25 2020 a b Nichols Ryan March 11 2009 Interview Phil Elverum The Microphones Mount Eerie Beats Per Minute Archived from the original on August 30 2020 Retrieved May 14 2020 Actom Brea 2016 Aspects of place in new folk music Masters Research thesis University of Melbourne pp 1 84 hdl 11343 122906 Retrieved October 25 2020 a b c d e f g h Hirway Hrishikesh July 1 2014 Episode 13 The Microphones I Want Wind to Blow Song Exploder Podcast Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved May 14 2020 Stosuy Brandon July 1 2009 Phil Elverum on Six of His Songs Believer Magazine Archived from the original on August 30 2020 Retrieved May 17 2020 Phil Elverum Diskant Archived from the original on June 8 2019 Retrieved May 16 2020 a b Lipshutz Jason March 9 2018 The 50 Greatest Interludes of All Time Staff Picks Billboard Archived from the original on August 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