Love This Giant

Love This Giant
The cover of Love This Giant: The musicians facing the camera and wearing black formal attire with jagged deformities on their faces
Studio album by David Byrne and St. Vincent
Released September 10, 2012 (2012-09-10)
Recorded Late 2009 through 2012
Studio Water Music Studio, Hoboken, New Jersey, United States (brass) and Patrick Dillett's Studio, New York City, New York, United States (additional instrumentation)
Genre Art pop[1]
Length 44:33
Language English
Label 4AD, Todo Mundo
Producer David Byrne, Annie Clark, John Congleton, and Patrick Dillett
David Byrne chronology
Live at Carnegie Hall
(with Caetano Veloso)
(2012)
Love This Giant
(2012)
Brass Tactics
(2013)
St. Vincent chronology
Strange Mercy
(2011)
Love This Giant
(2012)
Brass Tactics
(2013)
Singles from Love This Giant
  1. "Who"
    Released: June 14, 2012 (promo)

Love This Giant is a studio album made in collaboration between David Byrne and St. Vincent, released on 4AD and Todo Mundo on September 10, 2012, in the United Kingdom and a day later in the United States. Byrne and Annie Clark of St. Vincent began working together in late 2009,[2] using a writing and promotion process that Byrne had previously used on his 2008 collaboration with Brian Eno Everything That Happens Will Happen Today.[3] The duo had previously played together live at a St. Vincent show and on the album Here Lies Love.[4] The performers enlisted a variety of brass musicians to augment their songwriting and toured over the following year to promote the album.

Composition, recording, and production

The two artists met in 2009 at a Radio City Music Hall benefit concert for the AIDS/HIV charity Dark Was the Night.[5] However, the collaboration stemmed from a second meeting, at New York thrift shop Housing Works, where Björk and Dirty Projectors were performing. A concert organizer suggested Byrne and Clark try a similar collaboration.[6] Their work was initially slated just for a single live performance, but Clark suggested adding brass[7] to their line-up [6] and the two realized they could write original music around horns.

"I suggested brass as a prominent voice because, at the time David and I decided to write songs together, I had just done the Actor record with a lot of woodwind and a lot of Strings on it. So I hadn't explored brass and I wanted to. Originally, we were going to do a night of music at a bookstore for charity. So I was thinking, Okay, it could be a small ensemble: just me and David and a couple of guitars and we'll call it a day. But then obviously it grew and grew and grew. Brass was a way to bridge what we do in some sort of neutral, middle ground. When we toured the album, just the sheer number of people onstage was exciting and overwhelming, and these people organised the stage movement in really fun and idiosyncratic ways and it made for such a lighthearted, beguiling show." – Annie Clark[8]

The musicians composed lyrics in person and via e-mail,[6] which resulted in an entire album's worth of material. Byrne and Clark each wrote and sing their own lyrics, with the exception of "The Forest Awakes"—which Byrne wrote, but Clark sings.[9] The instrumentation and funk grooves discouraged Byrne from writing his typical personal lyrics to writing about larger themes and Clark emphasized the art music nature of the recordings while composing.[10]

The album cover was inspired by "Beauty and the Beast", with Byrne as a "Buzz Lightyear-like" beauty and Clark as a grotesque beast.[11] The duo originally intended a plastic Beauty and feral Beast as a joke about the age difference between the two, but altered their idea when they met the prosthetics designer.[10]

Promotion

David Byrne and St. Vincent worked with digital promotions company Topspin Media to distribute the promotional single "Who" and create embeddable widgets to stream the album. A music video directed by Martin du Thurah was released on September 4 for "Who".[12] Jon Dolan of Rolling Stone gave the song three and a half out of five stars, calling the collaborators' chemistry "shocking."[13] In reviewing the track, WNYC's John Schaefer drew parallels between their use of brass instruments and Byrne's previous work on The Knee Plays.[14] On July 30, the track "Weekend in the Dust" became available for streaming on the album's official website. On September 2, the full album became available for streaming via NPR.[15]

Byrne and Clark appeared on the September issue of Filter[16] and performed on the September 10 episode of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. On November 1, 2012, Byrne and Clark performed on The Colbert Report.[17]

The duo toured to promote the album with a backing band that includes eight brass players (led by Kelly Pratt of Bright Moments), St. Vincent's keyboardist Daniel Mintseris, and My Brightest Diamond's drummer Brian Wolfe. Like Byrne's previous Songs of David Byrne and Brian Eno Tour, the performers engaged in complex choreography onstage while performing.[11] Byrne also simultaneously did book readings to promote his book How Music Works.[18]

Tour dates

North America
Australia
North America
Europe

Brass Tactics

Brass Tactics
A piece of recording equipment hanging out of a brass horn on an orange background with "David Byrne & St. Vincent" and "Brass Tactics" written in yellow
EP by David Byrne and St. Vincent
Released May 28, 2013 (2013-05-28)
Genre Art rock, funk, indie rock
Length 18:11
Language English
Producer David Byrne, Annie Clark, John Congleton, and Patrick Dillett
David Byrne and St. Vincent chronology
Love This Giant
(2012)
Brass Tactics
(2013)
David Byrne chronology
Love This Giant
(2012)
Brass Tactics
(2013)
St. Vincent chronology
Love This Giant
(2012)
Brass Tactics
(2013)
St. Vincent
(2014)

The promotional EP Brass Tactics was released via Topspin's platform on May 28, 2013.

  1. "Cissus" – 3:14
  2. "I Should Watch TV" (M. Stine Remix) – 3:32
  3. "Lightning" (Kent Rockafeller Remix) – 3:12
  4. "Marrow" (Live) – 3:46
  5. "Road to Nowhere" (Live) – 4:27

Reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic77/100[19]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[20]
BBC MusicVery favorable[21]
Drowned in Sound8/10[1]
The Guardian[22]
The Independent[23] and [24]
Pitchfork Media5.9/10[25]
The Skinny[26]

Love This Giant has received generally positive reviews; aggregator Metacritic scores it a 77 with 36 reviews, indicating "Generally favorable reviews."[19] Reviewing the album, BBC Music's Jude Clarke calls it "a perfect cerebral pop pairing" that "improves and deepens on each listen" due to the songwriting and the singers' voices.[21] Bram E. Gieben of The Skinny also praised the "engaging musical conversation" between the two singers, but criticized the musicianship for lacking experimentation[26] and Heather Phares of AllMusic agrees that the album is lacking in Clark's "guitar acrobatics."[20] The Guardian's Maddy Costa has praised the vocals as well, contrasting them from subtle and seductive to "soft and whispy... with the glint of a razor blade."[22]

The Independent's Andy Gill[23] and Simmy Richman[24] consider the brass instrumentation the greatest strength of the album with the latter declaring the work "a skewed and funky instant classic." Robert Leedham of Drowned in Sound praised the "jaunty trombones" and "jubilant trumpet-lead fanfare" as well, but found the alternating vocals weak and Byrne-centric.[1]

Track listing

All songs written by David Byrne and Annie Clark, except where noted

  1. "Who" – 3:50
  2. "Weekend in the Dust" – 3:05
  3. "Dinner for Two" – 3:43
  4. "Ice Age" (Clark) – 3:13
  5. "I Am an Ape" – 3:05
  6. "The Forest Awakes" (Byrne, Clark, and Walt Whitman) – 4:52
  7. "I Should Watch TV" – 3:08
  8. "Lazarus" – 3:13
  9. "Optimist" – 3:49
  10. "Lightning" – 4:15
  11. "The One Who Broke Your Heart" – 3:46
  12. "Outside of Space & Time" (Byrne) – 4:34

Personnel

Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra onstage
Antibalas Afrobeat Orchestra is one of several guests on the album, augmenting the songs with their horn sections.
Additional musicians
Technical personnel
Design

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Leedham, Robert (2012-09-08). "David Byrne, St. Vincent: Love This Giant". Drowned in Sound. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
  2. Hyman, Dan (2012-04-15). "St. Vincent, David Byrne Album Collaboration Due in the Fall". Rolling Stone. Wenner Media LLC. Retrieved 2012-06-14.
  3. O'Neal, Sean (2011-09-15). "Interview: St. Vincent". The A.V. Club. The Onion, Inc. Retrieved 2011-09-15.
  4. Byrne, David (2010-03-15). "03.15.10: Collaborations". David Byrne. Retrieved 2012-06-14.
  5. Kara, Scott (2012-09-01). "David Byrne and St Vincent's artpop collaboration". The New Zealand Herald. APN News & Media. Retrieved 2012-09-01.
  6. 1 2 3 Abebe, Nitsuh (2012-08-23). "David Byrne and St. Vincent Take A Chance On Brass". New York. New York Media, LLC. Retrieved 2012-08-23.
  7. Hopper, Jessica (2012-09-05). "St. Vincent's Annie Clark on Recording With David Byrne: 'There Were Growing Pains in the Beginning'". Rolling Stone. Wenner Media LLC. Retrieved 2012-09-06.
  8. Pinnock, Tom (January 2015). "Album by Album: St Vincent". Uncut: 55.
  9. Martell, Nervin (September 2012). "David Byrne & St. Vincent: Songs of Ourselves". Filter (Filter Creative Group) (49): 59–61.
  10. 1 2 Nicholson, Rebecca (2012-09-08). "David Byrne and St Vincent: 'People assume this is an art project'". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
  11. 1 2 "Exclusive: Byrne & Clark Go Indie". The Daily Beast. The Newsweek Daily Beast Company. 2012-08-30. Retrieved 2012-08-30.
  12. Fitzmaurice, Larry (2012-09-04). "Video: David Byrne and St. Vincent: 'Who'". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 2012-09-04.
  13. Dolan, Jon (2012-06-15). "Who | Song Reviews". Rolling Stone. Wenner Media LLC. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
  14. Schaefer, John (2012-06-15). "New Track from David Byrne + St Vincent!". WNYC. Retrieved 2012-06-16.
  15. Thompson, Stephen. "First Listen: David Byrne & St. Vincent, Love This Giant". NPR. Retrieved 2012-09-03.
  16. "FILTER 49: David Byrne and St. Vincent: Songs of Ourselves Out August 31!". Filter. Filter Creative Group. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  17. Amy Phillips and Carrie Battan. "Watch David Byrne and St. Vincent on "Colbert"". Pitchfork. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
  18. "David Byrne playing Fallon w/ St. Vincent, doing book readings on tour, including one at NYPL (dates)". Brooklyn Vegan. 2012-08-29. Retrieved 2012-08-29.
  19. 1 2 "Love This Giant – David Byrne & St. Vincent". Metacritic. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  20. 1 2 Phares, Heather. "Love This Giant – David Byrne, St. Vincent". AllMusic. AllRovi. Retrieved 2012-09-16.
  21. 1 2 Clarke, Jude (2012-08-28). "BBC – Music – Review of David Byrne and St Vincent Love This Giant". BBC Music. BBC. Retrieved 2012-08-28.
  22. 1 2 Costa, Maddy (2012-09-07). "David Byrne and St Vincent: Love This Giant – Review". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 2012-09-07.
  23. 1 2 Gill, Andy (2012-09-08). "Album: David Byrne & St. Vincent Love This Giant (4AD)". The Independent. Independent Print Limited. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
  24. 1 2 Richman, Simmy (2012-09-09). "Album: David Brne & St Vincent, Love This Giant (4AD)". The Independent. Independent Print Limited. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  25. Harvey, Eric (September 11, 2012). "Album Reviews: David Byrne & St. Vincent: Love This Giant". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 2013-10-11.
  26. 1 2 Gieben, Bram E. (2012-08-29). "David Byrne & St Vincent Love This Giant". The Skinny. Radge Media. Retrieved 2012-08-29.

External links

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