Doleful
Lions - The Rats Are Coming! The Werewolves
Are Here!
Artist:
Doleful Lions
Title: The Rats Are Coming! The Werewolves
Are Here!
Catalog#: Parasol-CD-051
Price: $12.00  |
Tracks
on this CD: |
| I
Miss The Kings |
| Ocean
Stars |
| In
The Early Morning Aviaries Of Marathon |
| Sweet
Driller Killer |
| The
Rats Are Coming! The Werewolves Are Here! |
| Airline
Histories |
| The
Contrarian |
| Destroy
All Monsters |
| Driller
Killer |
| Hoshizaki
Cubestar Soldier |
|
|
other releases by the Doleful
Lions
Doleful Lions

Jonathan Scott-Vocals,
Guitars, Keyboards
Dave Jackson-Drums
Amy Palazzolo-Bass
Doleful
Lions leader Jonathan Scott says it all started as a joke.
Whether you
buy that or not is part of the charm and mystery of Doleful
Lions, who've gone from the oh-so-twee 80s-fixated techno-pop
of Jon's first demos, to twin-guitar southern-harmony rock
a la Let's Active, the dBs and (duh) R.E.M. as evident on
their Parasol debut Motel Swim
and now to an entirely
different lineup and a decidedly heavier (like, heavy thinking,
not heavy like Blue Cheer or anything) streak on album number
two, The Rats are Coming! The Werewolves are Here! Oh, sure,
there were hints of it on Motel Swim - the spooky death-waltz
of "Respirator" and the Bob Pollard-in-a-bad-mood
majesty of "Advanced Japanese Candlestick Man" suggested
there was more inside Jon's brain than smiles, vibes and
harmony. But never like this.
Check
this subject matter: serial killers, UFOs, the legendary
Aztec pilots,
famous monsters of filmland, Greek mythology, the feudal
system
and, of course, falling in love at the end of
the world.
Don't
freak! There's still plenty of the Doleful Lions pop formula
you know (if
you know it) and love (if you love it) - pogo-pop anthems
("I Miss the Kings"), bouncy AM sounds that Ray
Davies would've killed for ("Ocean Stars"), a song
that could be both by and about Alex Chilton ("The Contrarian")
and, um, oh-so-twee 80s-fixated techno-pop ("Airline
Histories"). There's just a broader palette of sounds,
that's all, thanks to the band's self-production along with
the meticulous ear of engineer (and now an official Doleful
Lion himself) Kurt Mueller - textures that are by turns disturbing,
distracting and disorienting on some songs, while others
get the Abbey Road-on-ashoestring orch-pop treatment, so
that by the time the album's closer, "Hoshizaki Cubestar
Soldier", oscillates into noisy oblivion, you may well
have heard it all.
The
studio tans are beginning to fade, Jon's written something
like 40 new songs,
a film for "Ocean Stars" begins shooting soon,
and a musical stage production (we hesitate to use words
like "rock opera", but
) incorporating songs
from Motel Swim and Rats are Coming
is underway (really!).
The current DLs lineup performed at this year's CMJ Music
Marathon, and might even come to where you live.
Doleful Lions 1999
were Jonathan Scott Amy Palazzolo Dave Jackson Doleful Lions 2000
are Jonathan Scott Kurt Mueller Dave Jackson
"Scoring with
the lion's share of tracks on this album pop fans will have
nothing to complain about, finding hints of everything making
pop so fun on this record
From the sweetly thin voice
of Jonathan Scott to the band's trumped up sparkling guitars
popping up on this record, the Doleful Lions exhibit one
of the finest understandings of everything pop since pop's
fall from grace earlier this decade." Aversion.com
"(Jonathan)
Scott carries on the North Carolina tradition of diminutive,
brainy pop guy with a high nasally voice (think Mitch Easter
or Mac McCaughan). Overall, Scott delivers a wealth of melodic
parts that point to emergence as a talented songwriter." -Angie
Carlson (Independent Weekly, November 10-16, 1999)
"The cryptically
titled The Rats are Coming! The Werewolves are Here!, was
released late in '99, and it's giving some reviewers a chance
to drop some names of their own in the midst of compiling
lists of perceived influences and kindred spirits: Ray Davies,
Brian Wilson, Mitch Easter, Alex Chilton, Robert Pollard
and Game Theory/Loud Family guy Scott Miller to name a few." -Rick
Cornell (www.spectatoronline.com, January 19, 2000)
"They've discarded
any twee elements to their sound and beefed things up significantly,
while still maintaining the melodic core which is cast from
a mix of guitar and keyboard. Harmony rich vocals inhabit
every song and there's an element of experimentation, with
synths, loopy SFX and even whistling , that sets the Doleful
Lions apart from the pack." ---Terry Hermon (Bucketful
of Brains)
"The Doleful
Lions have elevated themselves into the leader category when
it comes to taking their music in a new direction
.TRAC!TWAH!
is considerably longer, explores darker themes and fuzzier
sounds, and exhibits impressive artistic growth and maturity" Eric
Sorensen (Amplifier)
photo by Upma Singh

photo by Upma Singh
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