Boy from Black Mountain Beat Circus

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/29/2009
  • Sales Rank: 25,882
  • Label: CUNEIFORM
  • UPC: 045775029429

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Boy from Black Mountain

1LISTENThe February Train 4:16
2LISTENThe Life You Save May Be Your Own 2:59
3LISTENBoy from Black Mountain 5:47
4LISTENClouds Moving In Instrumental 1:25
5LISTENPetrified Man 3:42
6LISTENAs I Lay Dying 4:13
7LISTENSaturn Song 3:26
8LISTENThe Course of the River Instrumental 1:45
9LISTENThe Quick and the Dead 5:00
10LISTENThe Sound and the Fury Instrumental 4:10
11LISTENJudgement Day 3:55
12LISTENNantahala Instrumental 3:47
13LISTENLullaby for Alexander Instrumental 1:58

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

If the overall conceit of theatrically minded indie rock with strings from an alternate-world Edwardian era has seemed a bit overwhelming at points in the early years of the 21st century -- in terms of discourse and attention if not necessarily chart success, admittedly -- it's not that the approach itself is inherently wrong. On their third album, Beat Circus are at once perfectly representative of an aesthetic that touches on everything from Chris Ware illustrations to vaudeville romanticism, while possessing a few twists to keep Boy from Black Mountain from being "just" another such album. It helps that bandleader Brian Carpenter has an ear not only for energetic performances but a growling edge in his voice that suggests Tom Waits more than Chautauqua pageants -- it's not a question of "rocking out" so much as avoiding an eternal stateliness at the expense of all else. His band's pretty sharp as well, with performances (and arrangements) easily shifting from stop-on-a-dime rave-ups to lusher, more contemplative ballads. Another sign of his ear and eye for creative fusions comes in the guest appearance of the marvelously inventive Larkin Grimm on four songs, her own sense of strong performance adding even further spark to songs like the rushed "The Life You Save May Be Your Own" and "As I Lay Dying," the latter arguably the album's highlight, a giddy reflection on mortality and family memory. This all said, Boy from Black Mountain does often feel less like a creative extension than a codification of an approach, one with its own flair but ultimately seemingly designed to have its tracks appear somewhere on a playlist in between the National and Gogol Bordello. Time may well help Beat Circus stand out more strongly, but for right now they've found themselves unintentionally trapped in a larger context. Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

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