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Castaways and Cutouts
 
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Castaways and Cutouts [Original recording reissued]

~ The Decemberists
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Price: £14.49 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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Castaways and Cutouts + Her Majesty + Picaresque
Price For All Three: £29.75

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  • This item: Castaways and Cutouts ~ The Decemberists

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  • Her Majesty ~ The Decemberists

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Product details

  • Audio CD (19 May 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Original recording reissued
  • Label: Kill Rock Stars
  • ASIN: B00008XS4D
  • Other Editions: Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 13,185 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Extraits
Song Title Time Price
Listen  1. Leslie Anne Levine 4:12£0.79
Listen  2. Here I Dreamt I Was an Architect 4:29£0.79
Listen  3. July, July! 2:53£0.79
Listen  4. A Cautionary Song 3:08£0.79
Listen  5. Odalisque 5:20£0.79
Listen  6. Cocoon 6:48£0.79
Listen  7. Grace Cathedral Hill 4:28£0.79
Listen  8. The Legionnaire's Lament 4:44£0.79
Listen  9. Clementine 4:07£0.79
Listen10. California One / Youth and Beauty Brigade 9:50£0.79


Product Description

Description
With CASTAWAYS AND CUTOUTS, their 2002 debut, the Decemberists established themselves as one of the most noteworthy indie pop acts on the scene. Like Neutral Milk Hotel and Belle and Sebastian, the Decemberists specialize in wistful, melancholic pop with heavy folk influences, strong melodies, intimate atmospheres, and highly evocative lyrics. Led by Colin Meloy's distinctive voice and unique instrumentation that includes accordion, organ, and upright bass, the Decemberists successfully pull off the feat of merging an emotive, bedroom-troubador aesthetic with a sharp and endearing pop sensibility. The minor-key opener "Leslie Anne Levine" announces the band's m.o.: this is moody, sensitive music that spins yarns of the downtrodden and outcast. Shifting, multi-part epics like "Odalisque" offer a counterpoint to streamlined rock-influenced tunes like "July, July!," and it doesn't get any better than "Here I Dreamt I Was An Architect," featuring Meloy's beautiful, image-rich lyrics and a melody that melts in the mind. From its admirable songcraft to its haunting arrangements, CASTAWAYS AND CUTOUTS holds up to repeated listenings, and adds up to one of the best indie pop debuts of theera.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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 (3)
4 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ten tall-tales filled with musical adventure., 14 Jan 2006
By Jonathan James Romley (Dublin, Ireland) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
Probably the greatest progressive-rock band that never was, The Decemberists stretch simple pop songs into five-minute plus mini-symphonies, write concept albums about trains and the allure of the sea, and have visual allusions to their wordy lyrics littered throughout their highly-stylised record sleeves. The music however, is far from prog, drawing on the combined influence of rustic, lo-fi Americana and fey British indie, to create a rich and rewarding piece of work that manages to perfectly juggle the more flamboyant and theatrical inflections, with a heavy-dosage of pure-pop sophistication.

This is possibly my favourite Decemberists' album thus far, and is much better than the very good, but overly-serious Arcade Fire, falling somewhere between their style of Neutral Milk Hotel-inspired psychedelic folk-prog, and the more quaint and quiet style of bands like Belle & Sebastian, The Field Mice and that great "folksy" Bright Eyes album from earlier this year. The songwriting is just terrific (easily as great as those bands listed above), with chief songwriter Colin Meloy crafting ten-tall tales about architects, puppeteers, legionnaires, farmhands and fishermen, all backed by delicate melodies, robust production and a nice burst of cabaret-influenced theatricality. The best songs, if we can pick through the continuing excellence that runs from track one through to track ten, offer little snapshots of characters and places, with the musical arrangements and use of instrumentation often working alongside the lyrics to help suggest a certain time and place.

The opening song for example, Leslie Anne Levine, opens with a quiet bit of acoustic guitar and a sound that draws on more recognisable indie-pop conventions, as Meloy demonstrates his wit and storytelling prowess with the lyrics. The next song, Here I dreamt I Was an Architect is even better... unfolding around a perfect pop arrangement and featuring some of Meloy's greatest character development... demonstrating that, as a songwriter, he's just as influenced by the Broadway musical writers and playwrights as he is by the likes of Leonard Cohen, Stuart Murdoch and Bob Dylan. Some songs have fairly generic indie-arrangements, favouring the acoustic guitar, bass, drums and a smattering of keyboards, whilst others song break off into more adventurous territory, employing strings, horns, accordions and other such instruments that help to further create the world that Meloy is building.

Whether delightfully simplistic, or instead, veering off into surreal realms of baroque pop or music hall, the arrangements always stand out; mostly through the great performance of the band or through Meloy's firm understanding of melody and hooks. One of my very favourite songs from this album, July-July!, is almost as shameless in it's pop sophistication as ABBA or the Beach Boys, with the band taking a great vocal hook (I love the way Meloy phrases the chorus so that it sounds almost like "do you lie, July?") and then shaping the guitars, drums and the occasional stab of a funky organ alongside it. As with the preceding two songs (and the songs yet to follow), Meloy's penchant for storytelling is at it's most impressive, as he effortlessly mixes elements of character observation, knowing wit and what could be taken as heartfelt confession, and mixes it all up to give us lyrical couplets of pure gold, my favourites amongst them including the devilish "and we'll remember this when we are old and ancient, though the specifics might be vague, and I'll say your camisole was a sprightly light magenta, when in fact it was a nappy bluish grey".

A Cautionary Song is one of the band's most evocative and theatrical pieces of music, relying heavily on the accordion and those stomping drums, as Meloy sings about harlots and sailors in a slightly detached, narcoleptic delivery that would probably make Beck proud. As the story within the song intensifies, Meloy and the band become more satirical with their arrangements, bringing in references to burlesque cabaret and marching band percussion to help convey the feelings at the heart of the characters... a clever little device that is used throughout many of the songs here (though never to the point where it becomes predictable or too obvious!!). The next song, Odalisque, begins as something of a ballad, with a slow, lingering rhythm and Meloy's sleepy vocal delivery gently intoning "they've come to find you odalisque, as the light dies horribly, on a fire escape you are, all rare and resolved, to drop... and when they find you odalisque, they will rend you terribly, stitch from stitch 'til all, your linen limbs will fall", capturing a lulled mood of slight melancholy before the song veers off in a direction that seems to suggest free-form jazz and anthemic Britpop simultaneously!!

The closing run of songs is excellent, moving from Cocoon, a lush piece of jazz-pop, building around piano, percussion and double-bass, whilst Meloy's lyrics take a slightly political edge, to the yearning acoustic strum of Grace Cathedral Hill ("I'm sweet on a green-eyed girl, all fiery Irish clip and curl, all brine and p*ss and vinegar"). The Legionnaire's Lament is an up-tempo confessional that lays the groundwork for The Mariner's Revenge Song from 2005's great album Picaresque, with a great Divine Comedy style 60's pomp-swing (and a very Neil Hannon-esque lyric) merging with the more rustic-accordion and banjo flourishes. The next song, Clementine, is another of my personal favourites... a slow-tempo alt-country ode to lost love and lost youth, with Meloy at his lyrical best ("you slept in your overalls, as the wrecking ball bereft you of house and of home, and left you with sweet f*ck all") and the band on top form.

The closing track is really two tracks merged together in one long, ten-minute piece of musical splendour. It gives the record the epic, widescreen climax it deserved, bringing Meloy's little musical journey to a close, and putting the full-stop on a novel's worth of adventure. Castaways and Cutouts is a magnificent album, one that demonstrates superbly that the conventions of progressive-rock can influence lo-fi indie-music, and that lyrical intelligence and heartfelt emotion can go hand in hand with theatrical pomp and a cynical wit.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Weird and wonderful, 1 April 2006
By Jack (Durham, UK) - See all my reviews
This is a fantastic album by one of the best bands of recent years. It's a shame that they have gone so unnoticed, particularly in the UK. The Decembrists combine folk and indie with various other styles to create a sound which is truely unique.

The songs deal with emmotive subjects (i.e. premature birth and prostitution) in a way which is quite bizarely both amusing and compeling. Some of the lyrics are pure genius.

It is mainly acoustic, but is also very catchy, something which lots of acoustic music lacks.

The album also has a great deal of replay value. I have been listening to it for about two months and am still not bored.

Overall, I would recomed that you check out some of the songs before buying, as it may not be to everyone's taste. However, for anyone interested in clever lyrics and catchy tunes, this is probably for you.

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8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars jaunty haunting chanties, 4 May 2004
there is a very unique mood to this album; sea chanties and rough tales of 19th century people are complimented by the strangely melodic tunes, creating a sort of nostalgia. you must be able to appreciate the lyrics and the music to enjoy the album as a whole; otherwise it may seem repetitive.
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