Gallowsbird's Bark

Gallowsbird's Bark Artist: The Fiery Furnaces
Label: Rough Trade Us
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 021823002729
EAN: 0021823002729
ASIN: B0007MSU4Y


Release Date: 2005-01-25

Gallowsbird's Bark


Related Categories:

General General
Categories | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Indie Rock Indie Rock
Categories | Indie & Lo-Fi | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
Garage Rock Garage Rock
Categories | Rock | Alternative Styles | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music

Tracks:

  1. South Is Only a Home
  2. I'm Gonna Run
  3. Leaky Tunnel
  4. Up in the North
  5. Inca Rag/Name Game
  6. Asthma Attack
  7. Don't Dance Her Down
  8. Crystal Clear
  9. Two Fat Feet
  10. Bow Wow
  11. Gale Blow
  12. Worry Worry
  13. Bright Blue Tie
  14. Tropical Ice-Land
  15. Rub-Alcohol Blues
  16. We Got Back the Plague

Similar Items:

  1. Bitter Tea
  2. The Fiery Furnaces EP
  3. Blueberry Boat
  4. Blueberry Boat
  5. Rehearsing My Choir

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars "Bark" better than their bite.......2005-03-02

The Fiery Furnaces seem to be the new king (and queen) of enigmatic, larger-than-life indie rock. While their second album was the one that got things moving, their debut "Gallowsbird's Bark" gained them a reputation for rich music and strange, dreamy writing.

Siblings Eleanor and Matthew Friedberger open things with the jangly, cascading pop of "South Is Only A Home" -- it's a fun little tune, but a bit chaotic-sounding. It's only in the third song, "Leaky Tunnel," that the album kicks into high gear, with banjo and electric guitar, overlaid with sparkling piano and rapid-fire percussion. Then you know that these two are something special.

Dipping into alt-country in places, the Furnaces mostly focus on trippy rock songs and catchy oddball pop songs. There's an out-and-out rocker in "Asthma Attack," a sprawling experimental stretch in "Crystal Clear," and they even try a bluesy acoustic song in "Bright Blue Tie," which only has a few flickery synth bits in the background.

Sparkly, tinkly piano, folky, dreamy, trippy, rock'n'roll and psychedelic music-hall. Those are only a few of the things that come to mind when listening to "Gallowsbird's Park." There's something oddly childlike and dreamy about this music, despite songs about how "if men and wine don't kill me." Perhaps it's the fact that their music has so many facets.

The sole problem seems to be, oddly enough, restraint. The Fiery Furnaces are not now known for their musical restraint, but in this album they seem to be damming up their larger-than-life talents. But even dammed-up, their catchy, complex blend of guitar rock, banjo, and rippling piano is intoxicating, as is the oddball additions. Who knew that a band with garage rock roots could have xylophone and the occasional electronica flicker?

Eleanor Friedberger sounds like she's having a great time here; you can imagine this husky-voiced singer singing a shopping list and sounding great. As it is, she brings a devil-may-care edge to lyrics about paying fines, celebrating the millennium, and oddball rhymes ("Down in the dumps/Me and the seagulls we were looking for lumps").

Music Album:

  1. Paying for the Summer of Love ~ The Records
  2. Sack Lunch ~ Big Ass Truck
  3. Battery ~ Aveo
  4. What Goes Around ~ Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers
  5. NY2LON ~ Various Artists
  6. Green Crystal Ties, Vol. 10: 60's Garage Band Flashback ~ Various Artists
  7. Six & Seven ~ The Soft Machine
  8. Space Revolver ~ The Flower Kings
  9. Thankful ~ Kelly Clarkson
  10. I Got a Rocket in My Pocket ~ Jimmie Logsdon

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Blues for Fred ~ Joe Pass

Steppin' Out ~ David Torkanowsky

Echo Canyon ~ James Newton

Aviation ~ Ben Besiakov

Stripling Now! ~ Byron Stripling

Gold ~ Sergio Mendes

Adia ~ Oliver Ngoma

Afro Surrealista ~ Lu%C3%ADs Vagner

Super Star ~ Jewlery

Letter a Mr Le Directeur ~ Franco, Tabu Ley Rochereau