Squidco

Edit Your Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty

 
 Click for Advanced Search
  Useful Links:
   Just In Stock
   Current Email Update
   Recently Restocked
   Upcoming Releases
   Staff Picks
   Closeouts
   Rewards

   Home
   Log In
   About Squidco
   Payment & Shipping
   Gift Certificates
   All CDs

  Store Sections:
   Improvisation / Jazz
   Electro-Experimental
   EA-Improv
   Rock / RIO / Prog
   Compositional
   World, Misc
   Vinyl
   DVD
   Books
   Cassette
   Used CDs
   Jazz LP Reissues

 Featured Genres
 Free Improvisation
   Jazz
   NY/Downtown
   London/UK Improv
   Europe/Improv
   Quebec/Actuelle

 Electro-Acoustic
   E-A Improv
   Musique concrète
   Lowercase
   Electronica
   Ambient
   Sound & Noise
   Field Recordings

 Rock
   Rock in Opposition
   Prog/RIO/Psych
   Chamber Rock
   Improv Rock

 Compositional Forms
   Avant Garde

 Instrumental Forms
 Unusual Voice
 Guitar
 Electronics
 Stringed Instruments
 Piano & Keyboards
 Drums & Percussion
 Turntablists

 Miscellaneous
 Historical Recordings
 Ltd Editions, OOP
 World Music
 Soundtracks/Film Music
 Spoken Word
 Compilations


 Information
   About Squidco
   Philosophy/F.A.Q.
   Contact Us

Join Our Mailing List!
Email:

 Artist Websites on Squidco
 Chris Cutler
 Shelley Hirsch
 Barry Chabala



The Squid's Ear Magazine

Mastercard

Visa

PayPal





Jim O'Rourke's 1st solo album since 2001, a 38 minute instrumental opus of strong electric leads, percolating banjos, organic, kicking drum sounds and compelling rhythms.
 

O'Rourke, Jim
The Visitor



Label: Drag City
Country: USA

"With a contrariness befitting a man of his eccentric reputation, Chicago musician, producer and all-round renaissance man Jim O'Rourke has chosen to announce his return from an eight-year solo hiatus with an instrumental record comprising one 38-minute-long track. Great news for fans; not such good news for reviewers attempting to relay the unfurling intricacies and delicate nuances of this extraordinary piece of music. Recorded in his adopted home city of Tokyo, The Visitor is a bold and expansive opus which has illustrious precedents in the Beach Boys' lost masterpiece Smile, Van Dyke Parks' Song Cycle, and more recently high concept art pop albums such as The High Llamas' lushly panoramic Hawaii. The instrumental in rock music has tended to be consigned to either the incidental interlude or an outlet for outré experimentalism, yet this album reveals itself as both profound and surprisingly accessible.

The significance of the title should not be overlooked: the previous three O'Rourke records proper (Bad Timing, Eureka, Insignificance), have all been named after Nicolas Roeg films, and there's speculation that this album's title may be a sly nod to that director's The Man Who Fell To Earth, in which David Bowie's space alien records an album under the name The Visitor. Allowing a more literal interpretation, the title also lends itself to the notion of the music soundtracking an interplanetary odyssey, the meandering score evoking the wildly conflicting emotions of an outsider experiencing the shock of the new. And if this all sounds a bit 70s prog for your sensitive palate, than rest assured: the music is the usual genre-hopping melange of organic and electronic influences. The first 15 minutes alone encompass alt country, pastoral electronica, banjo-flavoured bluegrass and Gershwin-era jazzy flourishes, demonstrating a more eclectic oeuvre than most artists manage to fit in during an entire career.

The loose progression through musical episodes is punctuated by occasional lulls in the tempo, creating the impression of a neo-classical symphony whose orchestrated movements build to a crescendo before fading abruptly, to be replaced by another. There are recurring fragments of melodies and syncopated rhythms which serve as leitmotifs, giving the record its rich thematic cohesion and structure. Echoes of previous songs in the O'Rourke cannon abound, from hints of the folksy whimsy of 'Ghost Ship In A Storm' to snatches of the loungey exuberance which made his cover of the Bacharach standard 'Something Big' such an infectious joy. Elsewhere, you can hear traces of the taut rock rhythms that characterised Insignificance. But the record this most closely resembles - and indeed is conceived as a sequel to, of sorts - is 1997's Bad Timing, where abstract riffs were allowed to gradually evolve into clear, vibrant melodies. That said, The Visitor stands out from any of O'Rourke's previous work in terms of sheer scope and ambition: it's perhaps his most fully-realised, surprising and audacious record to date. [...]"-Darren Lee, The Quietus




Read more about this item
The Squid
At The Squid's Ear!




Related Categories of Interest:


Rock and Related
Guitarists, &c.
O'Rourke. Jim


Get additional information at The Quietus



Search for other titles on the Drag City label.
Price: $14.95
Stock Level: In Stock

 ADD TO CART 

Quantity:  

Shipping weight: 4.00 units
Quantity in Basket: none

 ADD TO WISH LIST 


Product Information:

UPC: 781484037521

Label: Drag City
Catalog ID: DC 375CD
Squidco Product Code: 11958

Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2009
Country: USA
Packaging: Jewel Tray
Recorded and mixed at Steamroom, Tokyo.





Personnel:

Jim O'Rourke-all instruments

Highlight an artist name or instrument above
and click here to Search

Track Listing:

1. The Visitor 38:03







Other Recommended Releases:
O'Rourke, Jim
Old News #8 [VINYL 2 LPs]
(Old News)



Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought:
Frame Quartet (Vandermark / Daisy / Lonberg-Holm / McBride)
35mm
(Okka)
Group Doueh
Treeg Salaam
(Sublime Frequencies)
Collins, Nicolas
Devil's Music
(EM Records)
Xu Fengxia
Black Lotos
(Intakt)
COH (Ivan Pavlov / Cosey Fanni Tutti)
COH Plays Cosey
(Raster Music)
Sill, Judee
Live in London: The BBC Recordings 1972-1973
(Water)



 
** Understanding Stock Level Listings

About Squidco   |   RSS Feed   |   Contact Us   |   Email List   |   Payment & Shipping
Your Account   |   Search   |   Shopping Basket   |   Checkout

The Squid's Ear

© 2002-2013, Squidco LLC