Owls | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | July 31, 2001 | |||
Recorded | April 2001 | |||
Studio | Electrical Audio, Chicago, Illinois | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 35:37 | |||
Label | Jade Tree | |||
Owls chronology | ||||
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Owls is the debut studio album by American rock band Owls, which was released on July 31, 2001, through Jade Tree. After the disbandment of Joan of Arc, frontman Tim Kinsella reunited with the former members of Cap'n Jazz to form Owls. They recorded with Steve Albini at Electrical Audio in Chicago, Illinois, in April 2001. The album is an emo and indie rock record that has been compared with the works of Ghosts and Vodka, Pavement, and Captain Beefheart.
Owls received generally favorable reviews from music critics, some of whom noted influence from the members' other bands, while others found it uninspiring. Rolling Stone ranked the album on their 2016 list of the 40 best emo albums. It was promoted with tours of the US and Europe before the members shifted focus on other projects. Following an appearance at CMJ Musicfest in late 2002, Owls broke up.
In mid 2000, Joan of Arc frontman Tim Kinsella reunited with the former members of Cap'n Jazz, namely his brother Mike as the drummer, guitarist Victor Villarreal, and bassist Sam Zurick. The reunion did not include Davey von Bohlen, who was busy with his band the Promise Ring. [1] The new act, which was called Civil War, performed at a fundraising show then spent one week working on songs. [1] [2] In September 2000, Joan of Arc released The Gap through independent label Jade Tree. [3] To promote the album, Joan of Arc, with Zurick in the line-up, embarked on an unsuccessful tour and were greeted with tiny crowds, and the band experienced internal strife. [1]
The Gap was met with a negative reception; both AllMusic and Pitchfork found it hard to listen to; [4] and the Chicago Tribune would later say the same. [5] Joan of Arc played another US show, by which point communication between members had broken down. [1] [4] In January 2001, the band performed four dates in Japan, before breaking up. [1] Two years since their inception, Civil War was announced to the public as Owls. [2] [6] Steve Albini recorded Owls at Electrical Audio in Chicago, Illinois, in April 2001; the recordings were mastered by John Golden at John Holden Mastering. [7] Tim Kinsella said Albini was crucial to the project; "If we are gonna do this, record to tape, record all live – it needs to be Albini". [8]
Owls is an emo [9] and indie rock album [10] [11] that drew comparisons with Ghosts and Vodka, which shared members with Owls; [12] the lo-fi energy of Pavement, and the jazz blues of Captain Beefheart. [13] Kinsella's abstract lyricism was influenced by the work of E. E. Cummings, and his vocal style was compared to those of Lou Reed and Neil Young, [2] [13] while Villarreal incorporated American Football-esque arpeggios. [14] His guitar work was described as similar to his recordings with Ghosts and Vodka, as well as Don Caballero's American Don (2000). [2] Mike Kinsella's drumming, coupled with Zurick's bass parts, provides structures and varying tempos similar to those of Joan of Arc and accompany Tim's off-kilter vocal performances. [2] [14]
The first two tracks "What Whorse You Wrote Id On" and "Anyone Can Have a Good Time" include bongos and tambourine. [2] In the latter track, Tim Kinsella sings about heredity and marriage, while its coda sees him pondering a conventional band format. [15] "I Want the Quiet Moments of a Party Girl" includes references to the Harper's Magazine essay "Who Goes Nazi?" (1941). [4] "Everyone Is My Friend" is a math rock song, with jangling guitar parts and upbeat drum patterns that drew comparisons with the work of Sunny Day Real Estate. [11] [16] "I Want the Blindingly Cute to Confide in Me", which is reminiscent of The Gap, epitomizes the musical forms of Owls; pseudo-jazz rhythms, Andy Summers-esque guitar playing, intermittent vocal melodies, and Kinsella's lyrical style. [15] [17] The titles of "For Nate's Brother Whose Name I Never Knew or Can't Remember" and "Life in the Hair Salon-Themed Bar on the Island" refer to Tim and Mike's cousin Nate Kinsella and a New-York-City nightclub chain, respectively. [4] "Life in the Hair Salon-Themed Bar on the Island" is an indie rock track that incorporates influence from Frank Zappa; [17] it exemplifies Villarreal's guitar abilities. [2] The second half of the closing track "Holy Fucking Ghost" has several tempo changes and is sung from the perspective of a depressed bartender who drinks alcohol to cope. [2] [4]
As Joan of Arc's break up became public in early May 2001, Jade Tree announced the release of Owls' self-titled album. It was made available for pre-order from mid-May and was released on July 31 of the same year. [18] The Japanese edition, which was released through Quattro Disc, includes a bonus track called "Later". [19] Between August and October 2001, the band embarked on a cross-country US tour. [20] Mike Kinsella left Owls to focus on his solo project Owen and was replaced by Ryan Rapsys. [6] In the lead-up to the Christmas period, the band went on a European tour, during which they missed six performances because their van broke down. After the tour ended, the members of Owls focused on other projects: Tim Kinsella spent early 2002 working on Friend/Enemy's debut album and a new Joan of Arc album, [8] and Villarreal and Zurick formed Precious Blood. [1] Owls performed at CMJ Musicfest in October 2002, [21] before disbanding some time later. [6]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [12] |
The Austin Chronicle | [22] |
Kerrang! | [23] |
Nude as the News | 7.5/10 [24] |
Pitchfork | 7.0/10 [17] |
Stylus Magazine | 6.5/10 [25] |
Owls was met with generally favorable reviews from music critics. AllMusic reviewer Peter J. D'Angelo wrote Owls is partially removed from the members' projects, though it still contains "plenty of off-kilter" moments. He said Kinsella's "instantly recognizable voice" is "pretty smooth for his fairly straightforward but still a little off-key vocal performances". [12] Michael Chamy of The Austin Chronicle called the album "mostly a breath of fresh air, even if it seems a bit unsure at times". [22] The Cleveland Scene writer Brian Baker wrote Kinsella warbles "in a key only he can hear" against a backdrop of music that "stays primarily within the parameters" of his past bands. [13] Cam Lindsay of Exclaim! said the album "sounds great", and that despite featuring both Tim and Mike Kinsella, it was effected using "no computers, no abstractions, [and] no experimenting". Lindsay added the former's "scratched blackboard of a voice" sings the "same brand of intellectual lyrics" as before. [11] Nude as the News writer Phil Lindert said it "almost seems like the product of an energized American Football, with little bells and whistles added for good measure". [24]
CMJ New Music Monthly 's Franklin Bruno also mentioned elements of the members of Owls' previous acts, and said the band's performances "improve immeasurably" on their earlier works. [15] The staff of Impact Press said the "experimental tangents are more reigned in", making the tracks "more coherent". [26] Pitchfork contributor Camilo Arturo Leslie praised Owls for being "back in strong form" after Cap'n Jazz, coming across as an "odd concoction of opposing and random musical and emotional trajectories". [17] Evan Chakroff of Stylus Magazine said the album is "nothing special", having heard its sound being "done better by other bands", and noted the nonsensical lyrics are either the "ramblings of a burnt out fool or transcendent works of genius". [25] LAS Magazine's Ryan Allen said Owls is "slightly uninspired at times", but with "enough going on to keep things interesting". He added it has insufficient "envelope pushing going on to really make much of an impact". [2] Ox-Fanzine reviewer Joachim Hiller called the band "terrible" and said the album became irritating "after just three songs". [27]
Owls was included in The A.V. Club 's Best Music of the Decade "orphan" list for the 2000s, which is reserved for albums that did not make the original list. [28] It also appeared on Rolling Stone 's 2016 list of the 40 best emo albums. [9] Similarly, "Everyone Is My Friend" appeared on Vulture's list of the best emo songs. [29]
Track listing per booklet. [7]
Owls standard track listing
Japanese bonus track [19]
Personnel per booklet. [7]
Owls
| Production and design
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Jade Tree International, Inc. is an independent record label formed by Darren Walters and Tim Owen in 1990 in Wilmington, Delaware.
Joan of Arc was an American indie rock band from Chicago, Illinois named after the French saint Joan of Arc. They formed in 1995, following the breakup of Cap'n Jazz.
The Promise Ring was an American rock band from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, that is recognized as part of the second wave of emo. Among various other EPs and singles, the band released four studio albums during their initial run: 30° Everywhere (1996), Nothing Feels Good (1997), Very Emergency (1999), and Wood/Water (2002). Their first two albums solidified their place among the emo scene; their third effort shifted toward pop music, while their final record was much more experimental in nature. The band initially broke up in 2002 and has reunited sporadically since then to perform live, but no new material from the band has since been released. They were last active for a live performance in 2016.
Cap'n Jazz is an American emo band from Buffalo Grove, Illinois.
Owls is an indie rock band from Chicago, Illinois. They were initially active from 2001 to 2002 and reunited in 2012. The band is composed of the original lineup of the emo band Cap'n Jazz excluding guitarist Davey von Bohlen, who had left to form The Promise Ring. The lineup has included brothers Tim Kinsella and Mike Kinsella, guitarist Victor Villareal and bassist Sam Zurick. Tim Kinsella and Zurick have also played together in Joan of Arc and Make Believe. Villarreal and Zurick played together in the instrumental rock group Ghosts and Vodka. The band signed to Jade Tree on May 3, 2001, and released their debut on July 31.
American Football is an American indie rock band from Urbana, Illinois, originally active from 1997 to 2000. They reformed in 2014.
Make Believe was an indie rock band, initially formed in Chicago, Illinois in 2003 as a touring version of Joan of Arc. The band was composed of lead vocalist Tim Kinsella, guitarist Sam Zurick, bassist Bobby Burg, and drummer/keyboardist Nate Kinsella. After 3 months of touring as Joan of Arc, the quartet returned home and decided to begin writing new songs with a more aggressive approach. Following a self-titled 5 track EP, their first full-length Shock of Being was released on October 4, 2005, followed by Of Course in 2006.
Tim Kinsella is an American musician, author, and film director from Chicago, Illinois.
Nothing Feels Good is the second studio album by American rock band the Promise Ring, released on October 14, 1997. The Promise Ring's lineup at the time of recording comprised Davey von Bohlen on vocals and guitar, Jason Gnewikow on guitar, Scott Beschta on bass guitar, and Dan Didier on drums. Produced by J. Robbins, the album marked a shift in the band's sound, refining to a more pop aesthetic while retaining their emo sound.
Very Emergency is the third studio album by American rock band the Promise Ring, released on September 28, 1999 through the label Jade Tree. Following the release of their second studio album Nothing Feels Good (1997), bassist Scott Beschta was replaced by Tim Burton. After a van accident, which resulted in a six-week break, Burton was replaced by Scott Schoenbeck. The band recorded their next album at Inner Ear Studios in Washington, D.C., co-producing it with J. Robbins. Very Emergency is a power pop and pop rock album that moves away from the emo style of their earlier works. It continued the sound of the Boys + Girls (1998) EP, and was compared to the work of the Lemonheads, the Pixies, Soul Asylum and the Wedding Present.
Mike Kinsella is an American musician and singer-songwriter. Having been involved in many Illinois-based bands, he is best known as the lead vocalist and guitarist of the emo band American Football.
Burritos, Inspiration Point, Fork Balloon Sports, Cards in the Spokes, Automatic Biographies, Kites, Kung Fu, Trophies, Banana Peels We've Slipped On, and Egg Shells We've Tippy Toed Over, more commonly known as Shmap'n Shmazz, is the only full-length studio album by the American emo band Cap'n Jazz. It was released in 1995 on the record label Man With Gun. Cap'n Jazz's lineup at the time of recording comprised Tim Kinsella on lead vocals, Davey von Bohlen and Victor Villarreal on guitar, Sam Zurick on bass guitar, and Mike Kinsella on drums.
A Portable Model of is the first full-length studio album by Joan of Arc, released in June 1997 on Jade Tree Records.
How Memory Works is the second full-length album by the American band Joan of Arc. It was released in 1998 on Jade Tree Records. The artwork of the album suggests that it is something of a companion to the debut album, A Portable Model Of...: the booklets for both records contain the phrase "a portable model of... how memory works."
Live in Chicago, 1999 is the third studio album by Joan of Arc, released in 1999. It is not an album of live material, but is rather named after the fact that the band members lived in Chicago in the year 1999.
Four Cornered Night is the second studio album by American rock band Jets to Brazil, released on September 11, 2000, through Jade Tree. In late 1999 and early 2000, while touring in support of their debut studio album Orange Rhyming Dictionary (1998), the band debuted new material. Between March and May, they recorded at Inner Ear Studios with J. Robbins. The emo and post-punk album featured the inclusion of cello and piano instrumentation, with lyrics sung from the first-person perspective of frontman Blake Schwarzenbach.
Ghosts and Vodka was an American instrumental math rock band from Chicago, Illinois. The band was made up of two guitarists, Victor Villareal, and Sam Zurick, bassist Erik Bocek, and drummer Scott Shellhamer.
American Football, also known retrospectively as LP1, is the debut studio album by the American emo band of the same name, released on September 14, 1999 on the record label Polyvinyl. It was recorded shortly after the band released their debut self-titled EP through Polyvinyl in October 1998. The group, consisting of vocalist/guitarist Mike Kinsella, guitarist Steve Holmes, and drummer Steve Lamos, recorded their debut album at Private Studios in Urbana, Illinois, with production from Brendan Gamble.
Victor Villarreal is an American musician and songwriter, best known for his role as guitarist in Cap'n Jazz, Owls and Joan of Arc. His music incorporates elements of classical, indie and emo, and contains surreal guitar solos and instrumentals.
American Football is the second studio album by American rock band American Football, released on October 21, 2016 through Polyvinyl. It was the band's first release since their debut album American Football in September 1999 and disbandment in 2000. In April 2014, American Football announced they would be reforming after fifteen years for a number of live performances, playing shows through the year and into 2015. In early 2016, American Football began recording the second album with Jason Cupp at ARC Studios in Omaha, Nebraska, and at SHIRK Studios in Chicago, Illinois.
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