Details

Track Listing 1. Prelude 2. Sons of the New Golden West 3. 51-7 4. White Fluffy Clouds 5. That Gum You Like Is Back in Style 6. Might Makes Right 7. Militia Song 8. R 'N R Uzbekistan 9. Sons of the New Golden West (Reprise) 10. New Roman Times 11. Poppies of Balmorhea, The 12. Long Plastic Hallway, The 13. I Am Talking to This Flower 14. Come Out 15. Los Tigres Traficantes 16. I Hate This Part of Texas 17. Hippy Chix 18. Civil Disobedience 19. Discotheque Cvb 20. Hey Brother
| Details | | Producer: | Camper Van Beethoven | | Distributor: | Bayside Record Dist. | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Camper Van Beethoven: Jonathan Segel (vocals, guitar, violin, synthesizer); David Lowery (vocals, guitar, piano); David Immergluck (guitar, pedal steel guitar, mandolin, background vocals); Victor Krummenacher (guitar, bass guitar); Greg Lisher (guitar); Chris Pedersen (drums, percussion). Additional personnel: Alan Weatherhead (guitar, pedal steel guitar, synthesizer); John Hickman (autoharp, midi, background vocals); William Grishaw (piano, synthesizer); Kenny Margolis (keyboards); Chris Molla (synthesizer); Miguel Urbiztondo (drums, percussion); Ches Smith, Frank Funaro (drums); Lauren Hoffman, Casey Martin, Teddy Blanks, Julia McCauley, Anne Hege, Nina Gates, Darion Arnette (background vocals). Recording information: Sound Of Music, Richmond, Virginia. Camper Van Beethoven's first new effort in 15 years, NEW ROMAN TIMES lives up to the high watermark set by 1988's OUR BELOVED REVOLUTIONARY SWEETHEART and 1989's KEY LIME PIE, the band's most mature and accomplished statements. The stylistic eclecticism that characterized those albums is in full force here with rock ("The Long Plastic Hallway"), Balkan dance ("Sons of the New Golden West"), country ("Militia Song"), experimental prog-rock noise ("White Fluffy Clouds"), even disco ("Discotheque CVB"). In addition to its appealing, kaleidoscopic sound, NEW ROMAN TIMES boasts some of the group's finest songwriting. An allegory of political crisis in the early 2000s, the record follows the adventures of a young Texan who joins the military, serves in battle, comes home wounded, only to join a militia group and eventually become a terrorist. The narrative contains veiled references to 9/11, the war in Iraq, and the foreign policies of the Bush administration in brilliantly incisive and satirical songs like "Might Makes Right" and "Hey Brother." Always adept at experimental musical statements (on "Come Out," the band remixes minimalist composer Steve Reich's song of the same name), CVB's profound thematic text raises the caliber of their achievement. This album was worth the wait.
Industry Reviews [T]here's plenty of violin freakouts, post-ironic surrealism, faux-ska and middle eastern prog...
4 stars out of 5 - [F]rom oddball Middle Eastern instrumentals to arch Kaleidoscope-type rockers to picture-perfect folk-rock...
[A] sweetly embittered geopolitical epic about the not-too-distant future... - Grade: B+
3 stars out of 5 - [The album] finds the Cali sextet charging through gypsy jams, psych-rock and scary-funny folk songs as it documents a parallel-reality America...
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