Search - Vic Chesnutt :: North Star Deserter (Dig)

North Star Deserter (Dig)
Vic Chesnutt
North Star Deserter (Dig)
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #1

When Jem Cohen proposed that Vic make his next album at the Hotel2Tango studio in Montreal, with various Constellation musicians (along with a couple of American friends) as players for the session, we were thrilled. When ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Vic Chesnutt
Title: North Star Deserter (Dig)
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Constellation
Original Release Date: 1/1/2007
Re-Release Date: 9/11/2007
Genres: Alternative Rock, Folk, Pop, Rock
Styles: New Wave & Post-Punk, Singer-Songwriters
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 666561004620, 666561004613

Synopsis

Album Description
When Jem Cohen proposed that Vic make his next album at the Hotel2Tango studio in Montreal, with various Constellation musicians (along with a couple of American friends) as players for the session, we were thrilled. When we heard the results, we were floored. When offered the opportunity to release the record, we were honoured. The broad cast of players - all seven members of Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band, along with Guy Picciotto (Fugazi), Chad Jones & Nadia Moss (Frankie Sparo), Eric Craven & Genevieve Heistek (Hangedup), Bruce Cawdron (Godspeed You! Black Emperor,Esmerine) and T. Griffin (The Quavers) - offered influences and approaches to Vic?s music that yielded a record unlike any other in his substantial discography. Recorded over the winter of 2006-2007, at one of the last sessions to take place at the original Hotel2Tango location in Montreall, we believe North Star Deserter is the very best album Vic Chesnutt has yet made (while humbly acknowledging the boldness of such a statement).

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CD Reviews

Vic Chesnutt's 2007 Release is a Beauty!
Jeff Feezle | Indiana | 09/10/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"The year was 1990. In a small bar in Georgia, Michael Stipe (founder of R.E.M.) was blown away by a paraplegic folk-rocker sitting in a wheelchair. The lyrics were monumental and had the trademark twists of an REM song with unusual syncopations and half-beat rhythms. Stipe then helped produce Vic Chesnutt's first album as well as get him the name recognition he so richly deserved. Since then, Chesnutt has been inexorably linked to both Stipe and the Athens, Georgia sound.



17 years later, Chesnutt is 41 years old and sounds virtually the same, vocally and musically, as he did in 1990. His latest offering: "North Star Deserter" was released on September 11th, almost 3years after his last album, "Ghetto Bells". This mysterious iconoclast has a strange, almost self-mocking delivery. Vic's words are very carefully constructed to both surprise the listener with unexpected combinations and a mastery of the English language. The songs on his latest release unfold with the usual halting style of Chesnutt. He doesn't overwhelm you with huge pop beginnings to a song. He doesn't overdub the songs with layers of orchestration or backing vocals. Smatterings of pop culture make their appearances (Prilosec, etc.) seemingly at random in the middle of a ballad. This is the hallmark of his work: expect the unexpected.



Formed around basic melodies, Vic Chesnutt easily dictates tempo and pathos within his voice. It is delivered with an oddly familiar Georgian drawl that is in stark contrast to his intellectual music. There are stripped-down songs standing side by side with towering rockers on this cd. In the song: You'll Never Be Alone, Chesnutt sings solo in a pondering ballad, then switches gears in the final stanza's with some great musical harmonies from Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band.



Chesnutt is the quintessential songwriter that deserves much more credit than he gets. His style of music doesn't easily fit into radio singles, so it is not too surprising that mainstream alt-rock don't even know who he is. I hope this cd changes that: I own all 13 of his works and NONE of them suck. I would rate this cd right up with his early edgy releases. Sit down, let yourself be transfixed by this one-of-a-kind cd. Then, when you're done, listen to it again, only this time concentrate on the lyrics. You'll shake your head in admiration at the poetic imagery and couplings of both music and words. Super solid effort that needs national recognition.



by Jeff Feezle of Macafeez

"
Vic's best ever!!!
Likebeingalive | Atlanta, GA USA | 09/23/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Being a longtime Vic Chesnutt fan, I was excited when I first heard about North Star Deserter back in June. My happiness was doubled when I learned that his supporting cast was to include various members of Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Thee Silver Mt. Zion, and Fugazi. I enjoy and respect all three immensely. It seemed too good to be true. Having worked with artists as far-ranging as Lambchop, Van Dyke Parks, Widespread Panic, and many others in the past, I am always interested to see what effect bands have on Vic and vice-versa. Then I read where Vic fans at Constellation Records stated that they believed this to be his best album ever. Wow! That is a bold statement, which they rightfully acknowledged. That is not something one just kind of tosses out there, so my expectations were through the roof, along with my anticipation. After having had time to digest North Star Deserter, I am in complete agreement that this is indeed Vic's finest work to date.



Lyrically, vocally, and tonally North Star Deserter possesses a depth that is staggering in its power. Many of the songs examine mortality and death with an intense and urgent honesty ( "Over", "Debriefing", "Marathon"). These three songs recall the song "Square Room" from The Salesman and Bernadette- so emotional, so evocative, so real. Vic's voice has never sounded better as evidenced by the fragile vulnerability of his delivery in "Fodder on Her Wings" and "Warm." The whisper quiet/raging loud dynamics of "Everything I Say" and the echo-drenched soundscape of "Splendid" display the creativity of the many diverse musicians supporting Vic on this album. Elsewhere the poetic "Wallace Stevens" floats lightly over an acoustic and electric guitar interlocking pattern, while "You Are Never Alone" offers biting social commentary in conjunction with tremolo guitar, backed by a group-harmony chorus. Basically, the entire album will command the attention of your mind, heart, and ear.



Meditative and thought-provoking, North Star Deserter ultimately proves to be the most poignant work in the Vic Chesnutt canon. Prepare to be floored."