Conor Oberst (album)

Conor Oberst
Studio album by Conor Oberst
Released August 4, 2008
Recorded January 2008 - February 2008 at Valle Mistico
Genre Folk rock, indie folk, country rock
Length 42:00
Label Merge Records
Producer Conor Oberst
Conor Oberst chronology
The Soundtrack to My Movie
(1996)
Conor Oberst
(2008)
Outer South
(2009)

Conor Oberst is a solo-album by Conor Oberst, of the band Bright Eyes, which was released on August 5, 2008 by Merge Records.[1] The album debuted on the UK Albums Chart at #37 [2] and reached #15 on the Billboard Top 200.

Production

The album was recorded in Tepoztlán, Morelos, Mexico between January and February 2008. A temporary studio was created in a mountain villa called Valle Místico at the outskirts of town. Conor Oberst was produced by Conor Oberst and engineered by long-time associate Andy LeMaster. A new band was assembled for the recording, which came to be known as The Mystic Valley Band. The result is Oberst's fourth solo album, and his first in twelve years, following Water (1993), Here's to Special Treatment (1994) and The Soundtrack to My Movie (1996). In that time he has recorded and performed in many bands and musical projects including Commander Venus, Park Ave., Desaparecidos, and most notably Bright Eyes. The song "Moab" was number 31 on Rolling Stone's list of the 100 Best Songs of 2008.[3]

Track listing

All songs by Conor Oberst, except where noted.

  1. "Cape Canaveral" 4:04
  2. "Sausalito" 3:10
  3. "Get-Well-Cards" 3:33
  4. "Lenders in the Temple" 4:35
  5. "Danny Callahan" 3:58
  6. "I Don’t Want to Die (In the Hospital)" 3:32
  7. "Eagle on a Pole" 4:42
  8. "NYC - Gone, Gone" 1:11
  9. "Moab" 3:36
  10. "Valle Místico (Ruben’s Song)" (Ruben Mendez Hernandez) 0:49
  11. "Souled Out!!!" (Oberst, Jason Boesel) 3:32
  12. "Milk Thistle" 5:21

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Billboard(not rated) link
Crawdaddy!(favorable) link
Drowned in Sound(8/10) link
Paste(80/100) link
Pitchfork Media(7.3/10) link
Rolling Stone link
Spin
TimeA− link

Entertainment Weekly said that on the album, "Conor sounds like Bright Eyes, only heightened--brighter, if you will: He's emo balladeer, country rocker, and ferocious folkie rolled into one."[4]

Track information

Personnel

References

  1. "Bright Eyes man reveals solo album details". NME. 22 April 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-29.
  2. "The Official UK Albums Chart for the week ending 16 August 2008". ChartsPlus (Milton Keynes: IQ Ware Ltd) (364): 5–8.
  3. "The 100 Best Songs of 2008". Rolling Stone (December 25, 2008). Retrieved 2008-12-25
  4. Tucker, Ken (August 8, 2008), "Conor Oberst". Entertainment Weekly. (1005)
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