How to Leave Town

Last updated
How to Leave Town
Car Seat Headrest How to Leave Town cover art.png
EP by
ReleasedOctober 31, 2014
Recorded2014
Genre
Length62:22
Label Self-released
Producer Will Toledo
Car Seat Headrest chronology
Disjecta Membra
(2013)
How to Leave Town
(2014)
Teens of Style
(2015)

How to Leave Town is the second EP by American indie rock musician Will Toledo, released under the alias Car Seat Headrest. It was self-published on Bandcamp on October 31, 2014. The EP would act as the final solo release from the project, as well as the last project before Toledo would sign to Matador Records.

Contents

Background

Car Seat Headrest originally started as a solo project by Toledo shortly after he had graduated from high school. [1] Throughout 2010 to 2014, Toledo would release the majority of his albums through Bandcamp, including four numbered albums, Twin Fantasy and Monomania among others. [1]

Following the release and mixed reception of his eighth album, Nervous Young Man , Toledo would begin planning out what would become his follow-up album, Teens of Denial, with the intention of writing music that was more straightforward and easier to perform live. [2] Many of the tracks from How to Leave Town would originate from the writing process of Denial. In an interview with Uproxx , Toledo stated that he considered the EP to be a compilation of B-sides and outtakes conceptually, though not literally. [3]

The formation of the project as an EP was inspired by Sufjan Steven's 2010 hour-long EP, All Delighted People. [4]

Composition

How to Leave Town has been described as indie rock [1] , synth-pop [5] , and lo-fi, [6] with critics noting the EP's less directly personal lyricism, as well as the projects borrowed influences from pop music. [3] Opener "The Ending of Dramamine" is the longest song on the EP at 14 minutes, [7] with the track making heavy use of synthesizers and unsteady guitars. [8] Toledo would note that he had drawn inspiration from Frank Sinatra when writing the chord progression for the song, as well the Modest Mouse song, "Dramamine," from which the song would draw its name. [9] In a track review for Pitchfork , Ian Cohen would describe the EP's second track, "Beast Monster Thing (Love isn't Love Enough)" as "giving listeners a direct line to [Toledo's] inner monologue" comparing the song's harsh lo-fi intro to Sparklehorse, and the works of artists from Saddle Creek Records and Elephant 6. [5]

The third track, "Kimochi Warui (When? When? When? When? When? When? When?)" would derive it's title from the 1997 anime film, The End of Evangelion. Writing for Paste, Casey Epstein-Gross would describe the song as "atmospheric", "devastating", and "hopeless", noting that it "[evokes] the sensation of standing alone in a desert, on a field, inside a planetarium, looking up at the sheer magnitude of everything around you and feeling just so very, very small." [7] "You're in Love with Me" is a more upbeat track, with Emily English of Campus Times describing its guitar and drum parts as the most reminiscent of Teens of Denial. [8] The last track on the EP, "Hey, Space Cadet (Beast Monster Thing in Space)" originated directly as a scrapped demo from Teens of Denial, [4] and features a returning refrain from prior single "Beast Monster Thing."

Legacy

How to Leave Town would serve as the final project that Toledo would self-release as Car Seat Headrest. [1] After signing to Matador Records in 2015, Car Seat Headrest would expand into a full band, with Toledo being joined by members Andrew Katz, Ethan Ives and Seth Dalby. [10] [11] Teens of Style , an album mostly made up of re-recorded tracks Toledo self-produced, would release in 2015, [10] with Teens of Denial following up in 2016. [1]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Will Toledo

No.TitleLength
1."The Ending of Dramamine"14:17
2."Beast Monster Thing (Love isn't Love Enough)"6:52
3."Kimochi Warui (When? When? When? When? When? When? When?)"4:44
4."I-94 W (832 Mi)"1:26
5."You're in Love with Me"5:42
6."America (Never Been)"7:15
7."I Want You to Know That I'm Awake / I Hope That You're Asleep"8:43
8."Is This Dust Really from the Titanic? [a] "1:57
9."Hey, Space Cadet (Beast Monster Thing in Space)"11:26
Total length:62:22

Personnel

Credits adapted from How to Leave Town on Bandcamp. [12]

Notes

  1. Stylized in all lowercase.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Robins-Somerville, Grace (30 October 2024). "On 'How To Leave Town,' Will Toledo Bid Adieu To Car Seat Headrest's Bandcamp Era". Stereogum . Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  2. "Car Seat Headrest's Will Toledo talks 4chan, Green Day, and why drugs suck". EW.com. Retrieved 2025-02-06.
  3. 1 2 Hyden, Steven (28 October 2016). "A Guide To All Of Car Seat Headrest's Pre-Fame Albums (All 11 Of Them)". Uproxx . Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  4. 1 2 "Car Seat Headrest cover story: Will Toledo's 12-album overnight success story". Loud And Quiet. Retrieved 2025-02-06.
  5. 1 2 Cohen, Ian (24 February 2015). "Car Seat Headrest: "Beast Monster Thing (Love Isn't Love Enough)"". Pitchfork . Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  6. Daly, Rhian (21 October 2015). "Meet Car Seat Headrest, The Seattle Bedroom Prodigy With 11 Albums To His Name". NME . Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  7. 1 2 Epstein-Gross, Casey (18 November 2024). "Car Seat Headrest's 'How to Leave Town' Turns 10 Years Old". Paste . Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  8. 1 2 English, Emily (3 November 2024). "Car Seat Headrest 10 Year Review: "How to Leave Town"". Campus Times. Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  9. "Anatomy of a Song: Will Toledo of Car Seat Headrest on "The Ending of Dramamine"". Under the Radar. 15 March 2016. Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  10. 1 2 McGehee, Cate (11 September 2015). "Adult of Style: Car Seat Headrest's Teen Confessions Took Him from Bandcamp Stardom to a Real Band". VICE . Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  11. Pareles, Jon (28 October 2015). "Review: Car Seat Headrest Recasts His Work on 'Teens of Style'". The New York Times . Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  12. Car Seat Headrest. "How to Leave Town". Bandcamp . Retrieved 3 February 2025.