Search - Wolf Parade :: EXPO 86

EXPO 86
Wolf Parade
EXPO 86
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Recorded and mixed at Hotel2Tango, with Howard Bilerman, in late February and early March of 2010, EXPO 86 is the name of the new and third album by Montreal s Wolf Parade. EXPO 86 follows the band s 2008 album At Mount Zo...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Wolf Parade
Title: EXPO 86
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Sub Pop
Original Release Date: 1/1/2010
Re-Release Date: 6/29/2010
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style: Indie & Lo-Fi
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 098787087024

Synopsis

Product Description
Recorded and mixed at Hotel2Tango, with Howard Bilerman, in late February and early March of 2010, EXPO 86 is the name of the new and third album by Montreal s Wolf Parade. EXPO 86 follows the band s 2008 album At Mount Zoomer, which itself followed their 2005 debut, Apologies to the Queen Mary.

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CD Reviews

The catchiness of their first record, plus the depth of thei
Lee L. | Washington DC | 06/30/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Wolf Parade's greatest strength is having two amazing songwriters at the helm. This could be an impediment; some people baselessly claim this in regard to At Mount Zoomer, but this simply outs those with little to no patience. But the band's third album, Expo 86, begins with a killer drum and guitar riff that puts Spencer Krug's amazing lyrical talents front and foremost. This album is the sound of Krug and Dan Boeckner settling into a peaceful and productive coexistence...more so than the first two records.



Wolf Parade might increasingly seem like the 'side project' compared to Sunset Rubdown and the Handsome Furs, but regardless of the other/past bands, Wolf Parade is one of the strongest and most consistent indie bands out there today. Expo 86 finds Wolf Parade marrying the catchiness of Apologies To The Queen Mary, with the depth and intensity of At Mount Zoomer. Krug offers up some of his strongest songwriting to date (which makes me really excited about the next Sunset Rubdown album), while Boeckner matches him practically song for song. It's a testament to how well Krug and Boeckner feed off each other that it's sometimes hard to who actually wrote the song, which is pretty easy on the first two records. Krug's "What Did My Lover Say? (It Always Had To Go This Way)" seems like it should have been written by Boeckner, while Boeckner's "Pobody's Nerfect" would have fit nicely alongside almost any track on Sunset Rubdown's last record.



Previous fans of the band won't be disappointed by any stretch of the imagination, while Expo 86 will most likely earn the band scores of new fans."
Apologies to Expo '86
Ged | 06/30/2010
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Next to Arcade Fire's new album this was my probably most anticipated album of the summer. Finally it is here and finally we can all enjoy it.



I will be honest I wish this album sounded like 'Apologies To Queen Mary' rather than 'At Mount Zoomer', however, the record is like those two previous ones smashed into one piece. Guitar and drums are perfect throughout the album, the Spencer's vocal is catchy as always. In addition, Spencer tries something new this time and does a little bit talking-singing, something alike Nick Cave does.



At first, I did not like this album at all. I thought it was too noisy, the guitar and vocals were not that clean as in 'Apologies To Queen Mary'. The songs were long and tedious and I was already giving up on it, however, I named this review 'Apologies to Expo '86' not by an accident. After listening to this album quite a few times, I am starting to appreciate it and love the songs which at first seemed the worst of the record. So, my point is DO NOT throw this away after the first few listens. What more, if you are a Wolf Parade fan, DO NOT decide not to purchase this just because of the sample tracks. This is because you will not be able to feel the whole of the song. This is not 'Apologies To Queen Mary', like I said before, the songs are long and they need to be listened from beginning to the end in order to appreciate it. For example, The favorite part of 'In The Direction Of The Moon' is the ending, however, with the ending I do enjoy what is in front of it.



I would definetely recommend this to Wolf Parade fans, you should like this, to people who are familiar with Spencer's work and projects (like 'Sunset Rubdown' etc.) and enjoy it, any indie fan. If you are new to this, try it out! Why? It is extremely fresh and original music, it is melodic and catchy with great lyrics, and who knows, it might make your day.



(Also in my opinion 'Palm Road' should go to the best indie song TOP list of this year. Amazing track.)



Key tracks:

- Cloud Shadow On The Mountain

- Palm Road

- Little Golden Age

- In The Direction Of The Moon

- Two Men In New Tuxedos"
Communal Nostalgia
D. C. Ober | Boston, MA | 07/25/2010
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Nostalgia is often a profoundly personal kind of wistfulness. A Proustian moment, after all, relies on our senses to stimulate deeply idiosyncratic memories. But there are times where nostalgia becomes a runaway meme, infecting a whole generation for decades at a time, and, as much as we would like to forget, there was a period of time in the early 21st century where we were all nostalgic for the eighties. Not only were we inundated with VH1's nostalgia porn, but a slew of bands that were aping early eighties new wave (from Futureheads to Interpol to Hot Hot Heat) came out like a stampeding herd. Many of these bands were kind enough to move away from their eighties sound in a gambit for a larger audience which in turn allowed us to forget the indignity of once showing up to a party dressed like Ralph Maccio. Wolf Parade, who initially built their sound on bouncy keyboards, might have been lumped in with the new wave of new wave bands until their sophomore album, At Mount Zoomer, put those associations behind them. It is strange, then, that they have opted to trade in on nostalgia once again for their third album, Expo 86.



The album's title is a reference to the 1986 World's Fair held in Wolf Parade's home country of Canada, and the album art is flanked on the front and back by children mugging for the camera in color washed Transformers-the-cartoon era photographs. This is a great example of how the entire album, from artwork to liner notes to the music itself, impacts how we listen to the music. The themes of nostalgia and childhood might not strike those who bought the mp3 version of the album as heavily as those who own the physical copy. The cover art might prepare the listener for Wolf Parade's return to some of the aesthetics of their first album. While At Mount Zoomer dispensed with the keyboards filtered through a circuit board in favor of much a cleaner plucking sound of ivories, Expo 86 has brought back a more synthetic sound that harkens back to when the photograph of the front cover were taken.



In addition to an aesthetic return, the lyrics are full of longing for the past. The most obvious song to trade in on nostalgia is the Dan Boeckner penned song "Little Golden Age." In addition to the song title, the lyrics speak to the pull of the past and the intersection between music and our adolescence: "Then you left town feeling pretty down / With your headphones and your coat and your dirty graduation gown you were / In the bedroom singing radio songs." Much has been made of the difference between Boeckner and Krug's songwriting. Often Krug has been represented as the more experimental and abstract artist while Boeckner has been described as the more conventional musician more concerned with traditional pop songs. This dichotomy isn't accurate exactly, but here Boeckner's more grounded lyrics become one of the strengths of the album. It's his songs that thematically guide most of Expo 86. "Ghost Pressure," a song whose very title invokes the idea of a lingering past, recounts a lover's kiss on the suitably suburban sounding street of "Orchard road" while the song "Palm Road" (a theme is forming) is propelled by the driving beat of Springsteenian drums to summon the spirit of a teenage road trip. These songs are the bricks that build the foundation of Expo 86 and ensure that, despite the divergent personality of the two principle songwriters, this latest release by Wolf Parade is more than just a collection of disparate songs, but rather a cohesive work of art from start to finish.



If At Mount Zoomer was characterized by songs that took their time getting to their particular destination, then Expo 86 can be described as a work that goes straight for the jugular. The songs have an energy that can be exhaustive. This newfound concern with grabbing the listener by the lapels and yelling in his or her face is reinforced by the production, which, unfortunately, pushes every instrument to the top of the mix. There isn't even a palate cleanser like "Fine Young Cannibals" or "Dinner Bells." The result is a lack of dynamics. Fortunately, the strength of Wolf Parade's songwriting manages to push through these slight problems. Expo 86 is proof that Wolf Parade is more than just some Handsome Furs and Sunset Rubdown songs thrown on a single album. Instead, it is a find example of how two artists can cause an indelible impression on the other.

"