Rehearsing My Choir
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Rehearsing My Choir | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | October 24, 2005 | |||
Recorded | 2005 | |||
Genre | Indie rock, spoken word | |||
Length | 58:45 | |||
Label | Rough Trade | |||
Producer | Matthew Friedberger | |||
The Fiery Furnaces chronology | ||||
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Rehearsing My Choir is the fourth full-length album by The Fiery Furnaces and was released in 2005. It is a concept album featuring Olga Sarantos, grandmother of the band's Matthew and Eleanor Friedberger, narrating stories relating to her life. Though the instrumentation is as complex as on the band's previous releases, the vocals mostly take the form of spoken word. At points Eleanor Friedberger speaks or sings words corresponding to the character of a younger Olga Sarantos, the two engaging in dialogue. This aspect has made many draw relations between the album and a radio play. Olga Sarantos died on December 31, 2007. [1]
Track listing
- "The Garfield El" – 4:23
- "The Wayward Granddaughter" – 6:23
- "A Candymaker's Knife in My Handbag" – 4:48
- "We Wrote Letters Everyday" – 4:17
- "Forty-Eight Twenty-Three Twenty-Second Street" – 4:55
- "Guns Under the Counter" – 4:31
- "Seven Silver Curses" – 9:20
- "Though Let's Be Fair" – 2:05
- "Slavin' Away" – 6:54
- "Rehearsing My Choir" – 5:43
- "Does It Remind You of When?" – 5:22
Additional information
Like Blueberry Boat, the album shifts around in a non time-linear way. It also includes a few sections separate from the main story. In the album's press release, Matthew Friedberger, the songwriter and lyricist, gives a summary and explanation:
Dear Listener, Tracks 3 and 4 take place in the 40s; tracks 5 and 6 in the 20s and 30s; track 7 in the later 50s; track 8 starts in the very early 40s; track 9 goes back and forth; track 10 takes place in the early 60s; the final track takes place in the early 90s. Track 2 takes place a few years ago; track 1 took place when it was recorded. The action depicted in "The Wayward Granddaughter" and "Slavin' Away" does not include the character Olga Sarantos plays on the rest of the record. "Slavin' Away" imagines that character—the main character—fantasizing, a bit remotely, about the hard lot of other women. Now, I wouldn't guess that the Main Character actually thought the woman concerned was riding around in a Norton side-car and operating her own cottage industry trinket assembly/sweatshop: but it might have pleased her to picture it so. "The Wayward Granddaughter" is about a different Greek-American grandmother and her popular granddaughter ("Connie"). They're from Chicago's south suburbs and don't figure in the rest of the record; I wanted to have another (slightly younger) grandmother and family in there for perspective or comparison's sake, so to speak. Thank you for your time, Matthew Friedberger
Critical response
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
The A.V. Club | [2] |
Gigwise.com | [3] |
The Guardian | [4] |
Pitchfork Media | (4.0/10) [5] |
PopMatters | [6] |
Rolling Stone | [7] |
Tiny Mix Tapes | [8] |
Like much of the band's output, the album received both enthusiastically positive and negative reviews from music critics. JSpicer at Tiny Mix Tapes called it a "Great American Novel via guitars, drums, bells, and whistles" and admired its envelope-pushing sound and unique storytelling.[8] Justin Cober-Lake at PopMatters found the storytelling "neither nuanced nor complex" and wrote that the music "lacks the focus, coherence, and development to be rewarding beyond a novelty listen."[6]