From listening to the debut album from Beirut, Gulag Orkestar, the last place you would think Zach Condon, the 19 year old behind the band, was from would be New Mexico, as his music sounds very much like it is made by a traveling group of musicians somewhere in Eastern Europe who lived about ... Read review
Disc 1 The gulag orkestar Prenzlauerberg Postcards from Italy Mount Wroclai (idle days) ... more
Rhinland (heartland) Scenic world Bratislava The bunker The canals of our city After the curtain Disc 2 Elephant gun My family's role in the world revolution Scenic...
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Advantages: Beautiful and unique music Disadvantages: Not to everyone's taste, very unusual
...the debut album from Beirut, Gulag Orkestar, the last place you would think Zach Condon, the 19 year old behind the band, was from would be New Mexico, as his music sounds very much like it is made by a traveling group of musicians somewhere in Eastern Europe who lived about 50 years ago. Zach found this Balkan gypsy style of music when he was sixteen after dropping out of high school to travel Europe, obviously this had a huge impact upon him as ... ...year, and for 2006 Beirut's Gulag Orkestar must be that album. Although it isn't going to be to everyone's taste, some may rather just settle for Kasabian or the Killers, it is something that everyone should at least try, because I can guarantee you that it is the best experience on a shiny plastic disc ever. ... more
From listening to the debut album from Beirut, Gulag Orkestar, the last place you would think Zach Condon, the 19 year old behind the band, was from would be New Mexico, as his music sounds very much like it is made by a traveling group of musicians somewhere in Eastern Europe who lived about 50 years ago. Zach found this Balkan gypsy style of music when he was sixteen after dropping out of high school to travel Europe, obviously this had a huge impact upon him as a musician, and to the benefit of all that hear his music. On this record he is accompanied by a whole range of instruments played by a few musicians that helps to conjure up images of traveling communities and gypsy culture, even though he lives considerably closer to Mexico than anywhere in Europe.
It is almost certain that listening to the different tracks on the album will conjure images of events in your life or stories you've been told, or if you are too young to have lived life fully enough it will cause you to remember scenes from movies that you can only vaguely recollect. From the opening, which builds from a clattering of instruments into what seems is a gypsy funeral march of sorts, to the closer After The Curtain, which turns manages to make electronica not sound out of sorts on an album filled with traditional instruments and is backed by a well earned round of applause, it is a journey to little ventured parts of Eastern Europe from a few centuries ago, and one that you will want to repeat over and over.
The first four tracks of the album are probably among the greatest openings in any piece of music ever, since possibly the classical greats, and although the rest of the album isn't able to live up to the opening it still is something very special indeed. Postcards From Italy is the absolute peak of the album, and if you ever need to explain Zach Condon's music to anyone, which I expect you'll want to do a lot after listening to this album, then this is the track to get them hooked on. With mainly just a ukulele and an occasional trumpet, and then later percussion is added to this wonderful mix, it is something altogether different from the guitar based indie rock that is oh-so commonplace now.
It seems there is one album every year that is something completely different from the norm in music and comes from absolutely nowhere without gaining a huge deal of coverage from the music press and manages to be one of the best records of the year, and for 2006 Beirut's Gulag Orkestar must be that album. Although it isn't going to be to everyone's taste, some may rather just settle for Kasabian or the Killers, it is something that everyone should at least try, because I can guarantee you that it is the best experience on a shiny plastic disc ever.
Advantages: A lot of work done by one man Disadvantages: Voice far too whingey
Gulag Orkestar is Beirut's debut album and was released in 2006 by Ba Da Bing. Beirut despite sounding like several band members is the sole work of Zach Condon. Beirut are often bracketed in to the New York Balkan scene which tends to include the likes of Firewater, Gogol Bordello, Tamir Muskat and Devotchka.
I recently did a review of Devotchka's album A Mad and Faithful Telling, unfortunately I'm going to give Beirut a similar description in ... ...Listening to this in a gulag would definitely send you over the edge!
1. "The Gulag Orkestar" - 4:38
2. "Prenzlauerberg" - 3:46
3. "Brandenburg" - 3:38
4. "Postcards from Italy" - 4:17
5. "Mount Wroclai (Idle Days)" - 3:15
6. "Rhineland (Heartland)" - 3:58
7. "Scenic World" - 2:08
8. "Bratislava" - 3:17
9. "The Bunker" - 3:13
10. "The Canals of Our City" - 2:21
11. "After the Curtain" - 2:54 ...
dangaroo 18.12.2008
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Advantages: A very addictive and unusual blend of styles. Disadvantages: Not for everyone, and not for sound engineers.
With a name like Beirut you may be immediately thinking about a small lebanese man with a wooly hat. Or you might be wondering how to pronounce it like me (bee-er-rut? bee-y-root? beh-yur-it?), but that's because I'm silly.
Anyway the point is the band's name is Beirut, but they're actually American. This makes the sound they achieve all the more spectacular. This album is full of accordians and trumpets and will make you feel like you're in the back of a truck-full of immagrants in Mexico, or watching a street performer in Berlin, or downing vodka with men twice your size in a cramped bar in a valley in Russia.
Anywho let's get started with the first track, The GulagOrkestar. It starts off with a loads of sorrowful brass, accompanied by bits of low honky-tonk in the background. After a moment of quiet, the real rhythm breaks out ...
Product Information for "Gulag Orkestar - Beirut" »
Product details
Title
Gulag Orkestar
Performer
Beirut
Genre
Rock & Pop
Sub Genre
Alternative
Release Date
06/11/2006
Original Release Year
2006
Label / Distributor
4AD / PIAS UK/Sony DADC
Pieces in Set
2
Studio / Live
Studio
Stereo
Stereo
Format
Performer
EAN
652637261929
Catalogue Number
CADD 2619CD
Additional notes
Album Notes
The debut of singer/multi-instrumentalist Zach Condon (aka Beirut), 2006's GULAG ORKESTAR marks the arrival of a precocious talent. It's a lushly arranged album that reveals Condon's unabashed adoration of Eastern European folk music, gilded with swaying accordion lines, rapturous string passages, and jangling percussion that seem wholly rooted in traditional Slavic music (see the waltz-like "Prenzlauerberg")--making its creation by a young Europhile from New Mexico that much more impressive. While there's little in the way of pop/rock influence in Beirut's instrumental approach, Condon sings in a low warble that recalls the Magnetic Fields' Stephin Merritt, showcasing his unrestrained flair for drama on tracks such as the tense "Brandenburg" and the swooning "Scenic World." Effectively displaying Condon's considerable abilities, GULAG ORKESTAR is a fully formed first outing that is sure to appeal to many fans of ornate and adventurous indie-pop.
Album Reviews
Rolling Stone (p.90) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Chock-full of accordion, brass noise and Condon's sinewy murmur, the album has got melancholic Easter Euro charm from here to Kiev." Q (p.141) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[A] astonishingly moving distillation of Eastern European melancholia with elegant histrionics." Magnet (p.103) - "[W]hen 19-year-old New Mexico native Zach Condon (a.k.a. Beirut) takes accordion-led waltzes and gypsy stomps for a spin on this debut, they sound exciting rather than exhumed."
Titles on disc 1
1.
Gulag Orkestar
2.
Prenzlauerberg
3.
Brandenburg
4.
Postcards From Italy
5.
Mount Wroclai (Idle Days)
6.
Rhineland (Heartland)
7.
Scenic World
8.
Bratislava
9.
Bunker
10.
Canals Of Our City
11.
After The Curtain
Titles on disc 2
1.
Elephant Gun (The Lon Gisland EP)
2.
My Family's Role In The World Revolution
3.
Scenic World (version)
4.
Long Island Sound
5.
Carousels
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Listed on Ciao since
18/02/2007
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