Search - Richmond Fontaine :: Winnemucca

Winnemucca
Richmond Fontaine
Winnemucca
Genres: Alternative Rock, Jazz, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Originally released in 2002, and unavailable in the US for several years, we are pleased once again to offer Winnemucca by Richmond Fontaine. Fontaine's most recent three releases have garnered 4 and 5 star reviews from U...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Richmond Fontaine
Title: Winnemucca
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: El Cortez Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 10/20/2009
Genres: Alternative Rock, Jazz, Pop, Rock
Style: Country Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 678277035829

Synopsis

Product Description
Originally released in 2002, and unavailable in the US for several years, we are pleased once again to offer Winnemucca by Richmond Fontaine. Fontaine's most recent three releases have garnered 4 and 5 star reviews from Uncut and Mojo in the UK. Award winning author, Willy Vlautin's songs are dark vignettes of ordinary life from the seedy side of town.
 

CD Reviews

Utter Perfection
slowcore | Los Angeles, CA United States | 01/23/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I loved Richmond Fontaine's previous two albums, especially Lost Son, their latest before Winnemucca. But with Winnemucca, Richmond Fontaine have outdone themselves. I must say that this is one of the best, most timeless, touching, and simply gorgeous albums in the entire "alt.country" genre, if not in all music. Willy Vlautin's lyrics are evocative, emotional, and show so much pathos for the type of person i like to call the 'sensitive ...-up'. These types pepper his songs...like the kid being driven by his brother to a jail for low-level offenders (you know, the type who choose to imbibe a substance other than alcohol and have to spend the rest of their life paying for our society's hypocrisy)...and ray thames from 'five degrees below zero' who pawned all his stuff and now has to live at his uncle's due to some imaginable addiction or mess up (as a female ray thames, i know exactly how miserable this kind of thing can be). They reach musical, not just lyrical, epiphany here too, from each tear-jerking pedal steel note to the wails of feedback on the second instrumental "Patty's Retreat", Richmond Fontaine have not gotten the kind of attention that many other past and present alt.country bands have gotten, and all I can say is its a damn shame. They make Uncle Tupelo sound coarse, Ryan Adams sound like a bratty punk, and the supposedly "seminal" Gram Parsons sound like the most overrated performer in the history of the genre. And to the few who may agree with this review, I'd suggest you check out Pinetop Seven, another wonderful and unappreciated 'alt.country' band. Their album "Rigging The Toplights" has the same kind of gorgeous fairground melancholy as "Winnemucca". Also try Hem's debut album, "Rabbit Songs" for a similar kind of beauty with amazing female vocals. If the three of them played LA sometime soon, it would be sheer musical heaven."
Who is Richmond Fontaine?
zrxman | Madison, WI | 06/16/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Shades of Jay Farrar and Matthew Ryan. "Five Degrees Below Zero" is worth the price of admission alone. Wish these talented guys out of Oregon would do some touring. Mr. V is a great writer, and I can just sit around all day reciting the lyrics. Great effort!!"
Existential Cow Punk
John P. Marsh | North Las Vegas | 05/31/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Richmond Fontaine (band name, not a person apparently) uses the detail of the Nevada landscape to capture vivid moments of insight, grief, emotional angst etc etc. "Winner's Casino," the song, is about needing to be 'left alone' (to heal?) Winner's Casino is a real casino in Winnemucca, Nevada. "Glison Street" offers a glimpse at lost love/ small town relationship. "Glison Street also exists. After listening to this album several times, I wanted to make the trek north, back to Winnemucca (where my car blew up in 1971 and I was left stranded.) With gas prices soaring, I don't need to literally hit the road, I can just turn up the volume. The band's sound is classified as wavering somewhere between cowpunk and alt-country 'slow core.' That's right. The combination of marrying this sound with Nevada short-story is compelling and emotionally satisfying."