Award-winning indie film director Jim Jarmusch has revealed that the soundtrack for his latest film, The Limits Of Control, is to feature a clutch of Southern Lord artists, including Boris, Sunn O))), and Earth.
Two tracks from the Sunn O))) and Boris collaboration Altar are included (‘NLT’ and ‘Blood Swamp’), but Boris also appear with four efforts taken from their Feedbacker, Rainbow, Pink, and Smile albums. Earth rounds things off with ‘Omens and Portents 1: The Driver’, from last year’s The Bees Made Honey In The Lion’s Skull.
Austin psych-revivalists The Black Angels are also rumoured to feature.
The Limits Of Control stars Isaach De Bankole as a loner criminal who journeys across Spain trying to complete a job, the details of which he won’t divulge to anyone, audience included. De Bankole has appeared in three of Jarmusch’s films, and in The Limits Of Control, Tilda Swinton, Bill Murray, and John Hurt also reprise their work with the director.
Are The Decemberists able to deliver again? The Portland band upped the ante with The Crane Wife, a album that was nearly smothered to death with praise by every music publication on planet Earth. The Hazards of Love is yet another concept album, that musical gesture that supposedly killed by punk around 1977. Since the members of The Decemberists hadn’t even been born then, they are happily unaware of that fact and main man Colin Meloy set himself to composing the tale of a woman named Margaret who is ravaged by a shape-shifting animal; her lover, William; a forest queen; and a cold-blooded, lascivious rake. The album’s first half was written in order, one song after another. “Then it got harder, once I was imposing a narrative on it,” says Meloy. “It’s fun to toy with little suites when you don’t have to fully develop them, but I’m used to keeping things open-ended.” They road tested some of the songs in 2008, with Colin Meloy sneaking them in into his solo shows.
Al little louder than the last one The Decemberists have donned an early seventies folk rock costume. With two additional singers in two for for the female characters (Lavender Diamond’s Becky Stark and My Brightest Diamond’s Shara Worden), this album is The Decemberists most ambitious yet. Add guest appearances by My Morning Jacket’s Jim James, Robyn Hitchcock, and the Spinanes’ Rebecca Gates, and the album could have gone under all the heavy-handedness, high-brow lyrics and recurring musical themes. As it stands, the songs have a lightness that belies the tragedy (and revenge) hiding under the gentle melodies. A Fall album that sounds like Spring.
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