The Meadowlands (album)

For other uses, see Meadowlands (disambiguation).
The Meadowlands
Studio album by The Wrens
Released September 9, 2003 (US)
September 19, 2005 (Europe)
February 27, 2006 (UK limited edition)
Recorded January 1999February 2003
Genre Indie rock
Length 56:13
Label Absolutely Kosher (US)
LO-MAX (Europe)
Producer Pedal Boy, The Wrens
The Wrens chronology
Secaucus
(1996)
The Meadowlands
(2003)

The Meadowlands is the third studio album by American indie rock band The Wrens. It was released by Absolutely Kosher Records on September 9, 2003 and in Europe two years later on September 19, 2005 by LO-MAX Records. A UK limited edition version with two extra tracks, "Such a Pretty Lie" and "Nervous and Not Me", was released on February 27, 2006. The album was named after the New Jersey Meadowlands, the wetlands near the Wrens' home in New Jersey.

Recording

Recording of the album began in January 1999, after the band had spent the whole of the previous year courting record labels following their departure from Grass Records. Drummer Jerry MacDonald had married and moved out of the house that all four band members had shared when younger, but the other three members remained living in the house in Fort Lee, New Jersey where the album was recorded, MacDonald joining them when circumstances allowed to record his drum parts. However, an album that was supposed to be recorded in a few weeks ended up taking four years to complete. It is commonly believed that the circumstances regarding the Wrens split from Grass Records was the main factor preventing the band from making new music (the label halted all distribution and promotion of the Wrens' previous two albums after the band turned down a new recording contract, worried that they would be forced to change to a more mainstream sound). However, in an interview in 2004 guitarist Charles Bissell said that exhaustion and loss of confidence in their writing was a more decisive reason:

"We did spend a couple years dealing with lawyers and labels. But after we released an EP in '97, we were at a plateau with our music. We weren't moving forward anymore. We were sort of exhausted. I had lost perspective and didn't know what was good anymore and couldn't write lyrics. We needed to crank out another album, but weren't sure why... There seemed to be no end in sight because every song sucked, every idea was bad. We didn't know what to do."[1]

After a couple of years of rewriting and scrapping entire tracks, the band hired engineer Alan Douches to master the tracks, and the introduction of a non-judgemental outsider helped to lift the pressure and move the recording process along.[1] After taking a rest during the summer of 2002, the band went back into the studio between November 2002 and February 2003 to complete recording and re-sequence the album.[2]

When recording had started in 1999, the Wrens had originally agreed to release the new album on Drive-Thru Records owned by Richard and Stephanie Reines, friends of the band. However, by the time the album was ready the group decided that it did not fit with the typical sound of the bands on the Drive-Thru label and instead opted to release it on Absolutely Kosher Records, run by another friend of theirs, Cory Brown. The album was eventually released in the UK and Europe two years later by LO-MAX Records.

The story goes that at the end of the recording process, the band threw a party where they deliberately wiped the master ADAT tapes of the album to celebrate finally completing it: Bissell later clarified that although this had indeed happened, the tapes were only one of several copies that the band had made.[2]

Reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic85/100[3]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[4]
Mojo[5]
NME9/10[6]
Pitchfork Media9.5/10[7]
PopMatters9/10[8]
Q[9]
Stylus MagazineA–[10]
Tiny Mix Tapes5/5[11]
The Village VoiceA[12]

The album was met with widespread acclaim on its release in the US and in the UK two years later. It was described by The New York Times as a "nearly universally acclaimed disc of bright literate pop".[13] In the UK the NME stated that "The Wrens are indeed a revelation: not only for some unique achievements within the stifling parameters of indie-rock, but for a raw emotionalism, well offset by vitriolic sarcasm... Beguiling, affecting songs are then shot through with noise cloudbursts, psychedelic harmonies and glissando melodies."[6] However, Q was far less enthusiastic, describing The Meadowlands as "a tortuous travelogue in the life of a band who've snacked so long on the fuzzy end of the indie rock lolly, they've forgotten the euphoric qualities that made them merely a half-decent proposition to begin with."[9]

Magnet named The Meadowlands its album of the year for 2003 in its January 2004 issue, and in the UK the Teletext music magazine Planet Sound placed the album at number 4 in its list of the Albums of the Year for 2005 (the year The Meadowlands was released in the UK). In 2009 online music magazine Pitchfork Media placed The Meadowlands at number 88 on their list of top 200 albums of the 2000s decade.[14]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by The Wrens. 

No. Title Length
1. "The House That Guilt Built"   1:22
2. "Happy"   5:33
3. "She Sends Kisses"   5:57
4. "This Boy Is Exhausted"   4:17
5. "Hopeless"   5:08
6. "Faster Gun"   3:50
7. "Thirteen Grand"   4:09
8. "Boys, You Won't"   4:29
9. "Ex-Girl Collection"   4:39
10. "Per Second Second"   3:38
11. "Everyone Choose Sides"   4:39
12. "13 Months in 6 Minutes"   6:50
13. "This Is Not What You Had Planned"   1:37

US Limited Edition Bonus Tracks

No. Title Length
14. "Splitter #7: Fireworks/James, I Wanna"   3:13
15. "Our Brightest New Year"   4:20
16. "Green Tides"   1:23
17. "Blue Lips"   1:43

UK Limited Edition Bonus Tracks

No. Title Length
14. "Such a Pretty Lie"   3:59
15. "Nervous and Not Me"   2:05

References

  1. 1 2 McMahon, Tim (March 10, 2004). "Songs from the Meadowlands". The Reader (Omaha). Retrieved December 11, 2011.
  2. 1 2 Lippy, Tod (Fall 2004). "Home Made: An Interview with the Wrens". Esopus. Retrieved December 12, 2011.
  3. "Reviews for The Meadowlands by The Wrens". Metacritic. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  4. Phares, Heather. "The Meadowlands – The Wrens". AllMusic. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  5. Cotton, Adam (January 2006). "Review: The Wrens – The Meadowlands". Mojo (London, England: EMAP) (146): 132.
  6. 1 2 Fadele, Dele (September 24, 2005). "Review: The Wrens – The Meadowlands". NME (London, England: IPC Media): 47.
  7. Schreiber, Ryan (September 29, 2003). "The Wrens: The Meadowlands". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  8. Garrett, Jon (September 19, 2003). "The Wrens: The Meadowlands". PopMatters. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  9. 1 2 Cameron, Keith (October 2005). "Review: The Wrens – The Meadowlands". Q (London, England: EMAP) (231): 121.
  10. Unterberger, Andrew (September 16, 2003). "The Wrens – The Meadowlands – Review". Stylus Magazine. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  11. "The Wrens – The Meadowlands". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved November 6, 2011.
  12. Christgau, Robert (January 13, 2004). "Consumer Guide: MLK Fever". The Village Voice (New York). Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  13. La Gorce, Tammy (May 7, 2006). "MUSIC; "Once More to the Abyss For the Wrens"". The New York Times. Retrieved December 12, 2011.
  14. Pitchfork staff (September 30, 2009). "The Top 200 Albums of the 2000s: 100–51". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved October 1, 2009.

External links

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