Track Listing 1. Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels) 2. Neighborhood #2 (Laïka) 3. Année Sans Lumière, Une - (French) 4. Neighborhood #3 (Power Out) 5. Neighborhood #4 (7 Kettles) 6. Crown of Love 7. Wake Up 8. Haïti - (French) 9. Rebellion (Lies) 10. In the Backseat
| Details | | Producer: | The Arcade Fire | | Distributor: | Alternative Dis. Alliance | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Arcade Fire: William Butler (synthesizer, xylophone, bass instrument, percussion); Richard Reed Parry (double bass); Win Butler (bass guitar); Régine Chassagne, Howard Bilerman. Personnel: Win Butler (vocals, acoustic guitar, electric 12-string guitar, piano, synthesizer); Régine Chassagne (vocals, accordion, recorder, piano, synthesizer, xylophone, drums, percussion); Howard Bilerman (guitar, drums); Timothy Kingsbury (acoustic guitar); Anita Fust (harp); Jessica Moss, Sophie Trudeau, Owen Pallett, Sarah Neufeld (violin); Genevieve Heistek (viola); Michael Olsen, Mike Olsen (cello); Richard Reed Parry (accordion, piano, organ, synthesizer, xylophone, upright bass, percussion); Pietro Amato (horns); Will Butler (synthesizer, xylophone, percussion); Arlen Thompson (drums). Recording information: Hotel 2 Tango (08/2003-??/2004); Win & Regine's Apartment, Montreal, Canada (08/2003-??/2004). Photographer: Hilary Treadwell. This Montreal ensemble's fiery debut is marked by surging guitars, soulful strings, driving drums, brilliant bass lines, and the quavering vocals of married couple Win Butler and Regine Chassagne. The group's song structures careen through a vast territory of musical and personal history, with lyrics warm with memories of childhood neighborhoods and deceased loved ones, resulting in an alternating current of joy and sadness. Favorably compared to the Flaming Lips, Mercury Rev, and Broken Social Scene, the Arcade Fire's sound seems to come from a lifetime of listening to the Cure, Talking Heads, Elvis Costello, and many others--even a dose of soul gets worked into these grand anthems. Chassagne delivers some spellbinding vocals on "Haiti," while the tinkling piano and strings on "Crown of Love" conjure up a heartbroken surfside prom. In 2004, this made many critics' year-end lists, and it's no wonder--the songs on FUNERAL are so packed with unique instrumentation, mesmerizing build-ups, and galvanizing tempo changes that they seem culled from some enigmatic, decade-spanning rock anthology.
Editorial Reviews Putting the 'fun' back in FUNERAL, the debut disc from Montreal indie-pop sextet Arcade Fire exhumes instrumentation extinct since third-grade music class and sets them ablaze in anything but a macabre fashion. CMJ
[A] compelling debut....FUNERAL deals with grief by obsessing over new relations and future births, decorating each lost leaf in brilliant fall colors. Magnet
4 stars out of 5 - Their songs strike out at unexpected angles, bringing to mind a morbidly romantic 19th-century Radiohead. Uncut
FUNERAL is a lovely, uplifting, and often pleasingly grandiose whirl through a panoply of sounds... - Grade: B+ Entertainment Weekly
Included in Rolling Stone's Top 50 Records Of 2004 - [W]ith lavishly orchestrated, emotionally stunning tales... Rolling Stone
4 stars out of 5 - FUNERAL aches with elegiac intensity....FUNERAL captures the agony and even ecstasy of surviving death all around you. Rolling Stone
4 stars out of 5 - Echoes of Wire at their mid-'80s jackhammer funk zenith abound on 'Rebellion', while yearning cellos frame a breathtaking turn from Chassagne on 'In the Backseat'. Mojo
Ranked #2 in Mojo's The 50 Best Albums Of 2005 - [T]he Montreal orch-rock sextet's debut was fervent and uplifting. Mojo
Ranked #60 in Mojo's 100 Modern Classics -- Joyful, original and sweet. Mojo
Few albums of similar emotional intensity have had the same staying power as FUNERAL... Clash
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