wow the last track
― ciderpress, Wednesday, 18 May 2011 18:55 (fifteen years ago)
Yeah, "Beth/Rest" is really something.
― Johnny Fever, Wednesday, 18 May 2011 19:01 (fifteen years ago)
you guys rule.
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Wednesday, 18 May 2011 19:12 (fifteen years ago)
Yeah, last track is so so great, love how the interlude before it leads it in too, after the already great Calgary.
I take it you got the link Bingo? :)
― ...wow! (Le Bateau Ivre), Wednesday, 18 May 2011 19:32 (fifteen years ago)
yes yes
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Wednesday, 18 May 2011 19:47 (fifteen years ago)
of course i cant listen to it until i get home.
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Wednesday, 18 May 2011 19:48 (fifteen years ago)
FUCK. SO GOOD. HOLOCENE is giving me a boner.
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Wednesday, 18 May 2011 22:01 (fifteen years ago)
Gorgeous stuff. It doesn't quite haunt me the way For Emma did, but this is only my first listen.
― Alex in Montreal, Wednesday, 18 May 2011 22:09 (fifteen years ago)
The last half of this is really beautiful, almost baby making music.....
― JacobSanders, Wednesday, 18 May 2011 23:14 (fifteen years ago)
peter cetera?
― JacobSanders, Wednesday, 18 May 2011 23:16 (fifteen years ago)
maybe fields of gold?
― JacobSanders, Wednesday, 18 May 2011 23:28 (fifteen years ago)
very nice after I got over the 'wtf' factor. compare to last iron and wine album which is beyond fucking awful.
― akm, Wednesday, 18 May 2011 23:30 (fifteen years ago)
What are the lyrics to holocene, gorgeous. I think somewhere in there he says "you fucked a friend"
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Thursday, 19 May 2011 00:44 (fifteen years ago)
I can't stop listening to that song. It's hitting me hard
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Thursday, 19 May 2011 00:47 (fifteen years ago)
That is Peter cetera in Beth/rest. I'm waiting for Daniel lorusso to make love to ally
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Thursday, 19 May 2011 01:11 (fifteen years ago)
At first I was really shocked at how different this album is compared with For Emma, even Blood Bank, but the songs I liked at first listen I'm really loving and the songs I didn't like at first are growing on me. Beth/Rest even in it's 80's bedroom glow is my favorite. My girlfriend and I have listened to it repeatedly.
― JacobSanders, Thursday, 19 May 2011 03:22 (fifteen years ago)
and made sweet sweet receda california love in shower costumes.
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Thursday, 19 May 2011 13:07 (fifteen years ago)
i've listened to this like 5 times in the past day so that must mean I love it.
― akm, Thursday, 19 May 2011 13:23 (fifteen years ago)
lyrics posted for those who are into lyrics.
http://jagjaguwar.com/blog/2011/05/bon-iver-bon-iver-the-lyrics/
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Thursday, 19 May 2011 14:37 (fifteen years ago)
i've listened to to the new bon iver several times this morning, motivated by the same sort of experimental curiosity that brought me to the fleet foxes last week. prior to this moment, i've deliberately ignored both artists, kept away by the sense that their music belongs, somehow, to another tribe (where indie's concerned, i typically affiliate myself with grubbier punk/psych/noise). did like gayngs, tho.
anyway, this is beautiful, a vague shimmer of sound that reminds me more than anything else of grizzly bear's veckatimest - another lovely psychedelic pop album that can seem overly abstract at first. i say that because, for the all the time i've spent with bon iver, i can't remember a single song, can't even quote a lyric. i'd usually find fault in that, but the album clearly intends to get by more on mood than on hooks, and in this case, i'm willing to accept the tradeoff. there's absolutely no fire here, nothing raw, challenging or insistent, nothing to break the golden, narcotic haze of voice and instruments, and i imagine that people who depend on more violent musical enticements will reject it as boring, safe or unimaginative. it is safe, prizing a pillowy sort of sensual comfort over all else, but it goes awfully well with warm sun and slow hours.
can't imagine it'll go down as a favorite, but it strikes me as quite successful on its own terms.
― contenderizer, Thursday, 19 May 2011 17:47 (fifteen years ago)
I just discovered I have been mispronouncing this band's name
― I HAVE ISSUES (DJP), Thursday, 19 May 2011 17:49 (fifteen years ago)
"Bon Scott"
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 19 May 2011 17:49 (fifteen years ago)
i imagine that people who depend on more violent musical enticements will reject it as boring, safe or unimaginative. it is safe, prizing a pillowy sort of sensual comfort over all else, but it goes awfully well with warm sun and slow hours
Uh, what if you like both extremes?
― Ned Raggett, Thursday, 19 May 2011 17:50 (fifteen years ago)
Yeah, there aren't really any hooks here. Lotta nice sounds though.
― Number None, Thursday, 19 May 2011 17:56 (fifteen years ago)
i could do without Hinnom, TX. though.
― Crooked Lust (thebingo), Thursday, 19 May 2011 17:56 (fifteen years ago)
best thing about this record: when it ends, the next thing that comes up in itunes = flying squad edit of boney m's "night flight to venus"
― contenderizer, Thursday, 19 May 2011 18:00 (fifteen years ago)
^ hooks! beats! words!
― contenderizer, Thursday, 19 May 2011 18:01 (fifteen years ago)
eh, that sounded snarky/critical. didn't mean it that way. i just love boney m!
― contenderizer, Thursday, 19 May 2011 18:34 (fifteen years ago)
boney ver
― Number None, Thursday, 19 May 2011 18:41 (fifteen years ago)
A+
― adult music person (Jordan), Thursday, 19 May 2011 18:42 (fifteen years ago)
Lyrics read like Finnegan's Wake refrigerator magnet poetry
― If Assholes Could Fly This Place Would Be An Airport, Thursday, 19 May 2011 23:26 (fifteen years ago)
wife's thoughts on this dude -
"i thought "bon iver" was his name and he was some french/italian foreign guy and he was all *in* with the hip-hop crowd and doing experimental music, but he's just some lame folky indie guy with three groups [bon iver, volcano choir, gayngs]... sounds like elevator music, boring.... reminds me of the colors gray, white and tan... and other neutrals."
*makes THUMBS DOWN symbol in the air w/ hand*
"oh also, gayngs sounds like a group based around wham! "careless whisper".... so lame."
― i genuinely thought when i first joined that he was the admin (ilxor), Thursday, 26 May 2011 04:07 (fifteen years ago)
I've listened to this twice since last week. Lady Gaga has been occupying all my time.
― Johnny Fever, Thursday, 26 May 2011 04:10 (fifteen years ago)
A group based around wham! "careless whisper" !!!!
― JacobSanders, Thursday, 26 May 2011 07:13 (fifteen years ago)
beth/rest is great. I'm getting some kind of 90's emo vibes from some tracks (especially the first) in an owls/ghosts and vodka way.
― owenf, Thursday, 2 June 2011 19:49 (fifteen years ago)
I have trained myself to not change "Calgary" on the iPod.
― The Edge of Gloryhole (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 2 June 2011 20:11 (fifteen years ago)
damn, "calgary" is the shit
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 16 June 2011 03:12 (fourteen years ago)
i keep seeing snippets of lyrics and it makes me never want to listen to this, because this man seems like he is the single worst lyricist ever
― thomp, Thursday, 16 June 2011 09:18 (fourteen years ago)
9.5 on P4K
― groovypanda, Monday, 20 June 2011 08:54 (fourteen years ago)
let's be honest...it could've been an album of morse code, and as long as it had the Bon Iver name on it that score was inevitable.
I still like this album btw. Don't listen to it often, but it's certainly good when I do.
― Alpaca Lips (Johnny Fever), Monday, 20 June 2011 09:03 (fourteen years ago)
Johnny OTM, he's one of PF's prime darlings.
Still, I fucking love this album, and think it totally warrants all the praise it gets.
― ...wow! (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 20 June 2011 09:28 (fourteen years ago)
vocals too. if it were someone else singing different words i'd be keen to buy into it, but ugh! that voice. ew! those lyrics.
― i love the smell of facepalm in the morning (ledge), Monday, 20 June 2011 09:44 (fourteen years ago)
Is there really a song on this that sounds like Africa? I might be tempted to actually listen then.
― Matt DC, Monday, 20 June 2011 09:45 (fourteen years ago)
Nah, Toto yes, but not Africa. It's the last song, 'Beth/Rest'.
― ...wow! (Le Bateau Ivre), Monday, 20 June 2011 10:00 (fourteen years ago)
im w/ ledge, the vocals really put me off
― just sayin, Monday, 20 June 2011 10:01 (fourteen years ago)
trim your facial hair son, makes you look like a rapist
― Not quite as sociopathic as Dom Passantino (King Boy Pato), Monday, 20 June 2011 10:06 (fourteen years ago)
Vocals seem a bit more natural than say, Woods, but what I really fall for is his compositions. Never much of a listener to lyrics either.
― Wacky Way Lounge (Evan), Monday, 20 June 2011 13:12 (fourteen years ago)
9.5????
― markers, Monday, 20 June 2011 14:18 (fourteen years ago)
haven't heard the record but that's super high
this album is great! no clue what "9.5" means in the world of pitchfork people but i would recommend this album
― ☂ (max), Monday, 20 June 2011 14:20 (fourteen years ago)
dunno... calgary is indeed beautiful, the album art is gorgeous, sonically it's lovely, but the songs are just a bit too wet in parts. i reckon the last LP holds up better.
― meaulnes, Friday, 19 October 2018 06:03 (seven years ago)
calgary, yes, beth/rest definitely
but overall found it a bit of a slog, overdone
― niels, Friday, 19 October 2018 06:04 (seven years ago)
classic sophomore syndrom, what came so easy on the first one sounds slightly forced/overthougt here
― niels, Friday, 19 October 2018 06:28 (seven years ago)
2 new songs.
I like Hey, Ma.
― triggercut, Thursday, 6 June 2019 03:01 (seven years ago)
album i,i out August 30
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wU-s_Zxv_MQ
i really like "faith" out of the new songs
― ufo, Thursday, 11 July 2019 17:27 (six years ago)
have loved all 4 of the new ones so far. U and Faith maybe above the others.
― gman59, Thursday, 11 July 2019 20:48 (six years ago)
U (Man Like) > Faith > Hey, Ma > Jelmore
― gman59, Friday, 12 July 2019 19:39 (six years ago)
the album is out early and i'm really liking it on first listen - probably my favourite of his? a successful improvement on the samples-and-synths-everywhere sound of the last one which had some cool ideas but it felt too fragmented for it to really work that well overall. goes much further into sublime sophisti- (and i want to say kinda balearic in places) territory than his previous work too - "salem" and "sh'diah" are especially good.
― ufo, Thursday, 8 August 2019 15:03 (six years ago)
Feel like some of the early over-praise for this is music over-correcting for the fact that they didn't call 22, A Million as being his best album by a distance.
― in twelve parts (lamonti), Wednesday, 14 August 2019 23:23 (six years ago)
*music critics
Yeah, perhaps. I repped for 22, A Million (even in this thread) but eventually for me, the live reworkings superceded the album versions. The December 2016 show at Pioneer Works seems the definitive listen these days. I'm still underwhelmed by the new record.
― doug watson, Thursday, 15 August 2019 01:25 (six years ago)
idk the critical praise for this seems pretty in line with the last two overall, maybe a little weaker if anything.
22, a million has some of his best work (particularly the middle section of "33 god"/"29 strafford apts"/"666") but as an album it doesn't work that well for me. it's very dense with ideas but doesn't really let them breathe, especially on the first two tracks. "45" and "00000 million" are pretty slight as songs too
― ufo, Thursday, 15 August 2019 07:25 (six years ago)
Wore out For Emma, Forever Ago in response to a rough breakup back in 2008. I doubt I'll ever revisit it but it did what it had to most effectively. None of his subsequent records have held my attention.
― pomenitul, Thursday, 15 August 2019 08:14 (six years ago)
Don’t care for this one at all; I did like the last one though. This just seems like a less interesting retread.
― akm, Friday, 16 August 2019 20:51 (six years ago)
Good tip-off re that Pioneer Works show, Doug.
― djh, Friday, 30 August 2019 22:47 (six years ago)
Curious to know how other Bon Iver fans received the Taylor Swift duet "Exile"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osdoLjUNFnA
― Indexed, Thursday, 30 July 2020 15:54 (five years ago)
still sticking on 22, A Million on the reg
― in twelve parts (lamonti), Friday, 26 March 2021 23:36 (five years ago)
Not massively feeling the new S Carey, so far:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UWvRRwJOfY4
― djh, Wednesday, 9 February 2022 19:16 (four years ago)
Flagging this for my fellow Vernon fans: https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/deyarmond-edison-epoch/
Epoch begins with a dilemma. To explain why the avant-Americana quartet DeYarmond Edison is worth remembering, the box set would have to start with the recordings they made closer to the end of their mayfly lifespan. But to tell the whole story, it would have to start with Mount Vernon, their precociously professional teen band, whose songs, as the accompanying book gently concedes, may grate on the adult sensibilities at which this handsome shelf-buster is aimed. That they appear at the beginning anyway shows just how hard Epoch comes down on the side of storytelling. It’s a work of music journalism as much as a portfolio of songs, excavating how Justin Vernon, Joe Westerlund, and brothers Brad and Phil Cook grew up together in Wisconsin, rampantly evolved in North Carolina, and split off asymmetrically, with three of them earning modest acclaim as Megafaun and one earning Grammy awards and Taylor Swift guest spots as Bon Iver.The box is divided into six chronological parts, beginning with All of Us Free, an LP that captures DeYarmond Edison taking shape in the late 1990s and early ’00s. The second LP, Silent Signs, reproduces their second album, which they recorded just before leaving Eau Claire. That Was Then consists of four CDs documenting the performances in which they dynamited their newly refined sound, and these discs form the messy, brilliant heart of the box and the band. The LP Epoch, Etc. is the sound of them breaking apart under the stress, and hazeltons is Vernon breaking out on his own. The set concludes with the LP Where We Belong, with an A-side of recrimination and a B-side of reconciliation.Epoch was executive produced by Grayson Haver Currin, a Pitchfork contributor who also wrote the 114-page accompaniment, Time to Know. When DeYarmond Edison moved from the Chippewa Valley to the Southern capital of Raleigh in 2005, Haver Currin became a friend and fan, and the project is such a close study of their bond that it becomes a monument for friendship writ large—how it fits people together, changes them until they fit no more, and then, with patience, rejoins them at new seams.
The box is divided into six chronological parts, beginning with All of Us Free, an LP that captures DeYarmond Edison taking shape in the late 1990s and early ’00s. The second LP, Silent Signs, reproduces their second album, which they recorded just before leaving Eau Claire. That Was Then consists of four CDs documenting the performances in which they dynamited their newly refined sound, and these discs form the messy, brilliant heart of the box and the band. The LP Epoch, Etc. is the sound of them breaking apart under the stress, and hazeltons is Vernon breaking out on his own. The set concludes with the LP Where We Belong, with an A-side of recrimination and a B-side of reconciliation.
Epoch was executive produced by Grayson Haver Currin, a Pitchfork contributor who also wrote the 114-page accompaniment, Time to Know. When DeYarmond Edison moved from the Chippewa Valley to the Southern capital of Raleigh in 2005, Haver Currin became a friend and fan, and the project is such a close study of their bond that it becomes a monument for friendship writ large—how it fits people together, changes them until they fit no more, and then, with patience, rejoins them at new seams.
― Indexed, Tuesday, 22 August 2023 19:28 (two years ago)
new album is good but it's also very close to the last 1975 album lol
― ufo, Friday, 11 April 2025 08:08 (one year ago)
sold
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 11 April 2025 14:57 (one year ago)
Im hearing a lot of "Lady in Red" in that "Everything Is Peaceful Love" beat
― gman59, Friday, 11 April 2025 19:41 (one year ago)
he's shifted away from the abstraction of the last two albums to go full sophisti-pop, it's his most straight-forward album since the first. i really liked i,i but this pop shift is pretty welcome
― ufo, Friday, 11 April 2025 23:15 (one year ago)
A few thoughts:- This is very soulful. His vocals and lyrics have never been clearer, and it’s disarming. - Some of the melodies on this record are way stickier than his prior work. I’ve had Everything is Peaceful Love in my head for two days. - As ufo said, the album is a big evolution toward pop but still sounds like Bon Iver. The influence (and contributions) of Haim, Jenn Wasner, Dijon and Mk.gee are palpable. I love the faux gospel moments.
― Indexed, Sunday, 13 April 2025 13:13 (one year ago)
"There's a Rhythm" -- yes there is!
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 13 April 2025 13:25 (one year ago)
If y'all liked how he Bonnie Raitt-ized "I think about it all the time," you'll dig the second half of this album.
― the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 13 April 2025 14:05 (one year ago)
new live album is wonderful, maybe the best thing he's done
― ufo, Tuesday, 7 April 2026 13:02 (two months ago)