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Magnetic Fields Music

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Love at the Bottom of the Sea
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Merge Records
Release Date : 2012-03-06
Artistopia's Price :$13.83
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69 Love Songs
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Merge Records
Release Date : 1999-09-07
Artistopia's Price :$31.65
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Realism
Music Artist : The Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Nonesuch
Release Date : 2010-01-26
Artistopia's Price :$13.99
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Magnetic Fields' third Nonesuch disc, Realism, is the flipside to the industrial pop of Distortion, the quartet's brilliant 2008 homage to, of all things, the clangorous sound of the Jesus and Mary Chain. While Distortion was recorded quickly and noisily in the stairwells and rooms of the New York City apartment building to which singer-songwriter-bandleader Stephen Merritt was about to bid adieu for California, Realism was cut in the distortion-free environs of a Los Angeles studio, and its sound is as pristine as a plein-air painting. There are no drum kits to be heard, and the fascinatingly varied instrumentation - guitars, accordions, violins, cellos, tablas, banjos, tuba, even a smattering of mellifluous falling leaves - did not need to be plugged in. And, as with Distortion, the album credits emphasize: No Synths.

With tongue only slightly in cheek, Merritt has taken to declaring Realism his "folk" album. To get the point across, there is an upbeat, sing-along number early in the set called "We Are Having a Hootenany." Merritt's inspirations, however, were the orchestrated, mostly British folk of the late sixties/early seventies--which owe as much to sixties psychedelia as to traditional music--and the work of Judy Collins, who stretched the boundaries of "folk" with the chamber-pop arrangements of such albums as In My Life and Wildflowers.

Like Collins, Merritt favors variety and theatricality. She skipped from Jacques Brel to the Beatles; he goes from the trippy, toy-box melodies of "The Dolls' Tea Party" and "Painted Flower" to the foot-stomping rhythms of "The Dada Polka" (for which one only has to get up and "do something"). There's even a deceptively festive holiday number, "Everything Is One Big Christmas Tree," featuring a lusty chorus sung in German -- Kurt Weill in a holiday mood. In content, Merritt's songs veer between longing and loneliness, desire and dismissal, romance and revenge. Reality is as distorted as ever, and the characters who populate his songs are never just plain folk. As Jon Pareles of the New York Times put it in a review of Magnetic Fields' 2008 Town Hall concert, Merritt's songs are "elegantly phrased, understatedly sardonic tales of disillusionment. The loftier the dreams, the greater the letdown, an insight he plays for both chuckles and heartache."

Along with his long-time band-mates Sam Davol, Claudia Gonson and John Woo, Merritt is joined again by vocalist Shirley Simms, (whose plaintive tone on Distortion lent poignancy to the murderous fantasy of "California Girls" and the erotic musings in "The Nun's Litany") and accordionist Daniel Handler (a/k/a novelist Lemony Snicket, with whom Merritt created the Gothic Archies' faux children's disc, The Tragic Treasury). Also on board: horn player Johnny Blood and violinist Ida Pearle, familiar to fans of Magnetic Fields' earlier, independently released work.
Distortion
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Nonesuch
Release Date : 2008-01-15
Artistopia's Price :$13.99
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Distortion, Magnetic Fields’ second Nonesuch release, features the brilliant melodies and wry lyrics that composer and band leader Stephin Merritt has long been praised for, but, as the album title suggests, he serves them up with a twist. If the late, great Cole Porter had somehow been resurrected just in time to appear at the Coachella indie-rock fest, the results might sound something like this –"small, ironic tales of love and woe," as National Public Radio has described Merritt’s songs, startlingly enveloped in layers of live feedback that recall the noisy pop provocations of legendary Scottish quartet The Jesus and Mary Chain.

As album producer, Merritt takes a completely novel approach to his deployment of feedback, going well beyond mere fuzzed-out guitar to incorporate cello, piano and accordion into his mad-scientist mix. What he’s conjured up is a gorgeous drone that reverberates over the length of 13 tunes – from the exuberantly rocking opener, "Three Way," to the soused, sing-along lament, "Too Drunk To Dream," to the bittersweet closer, "Courtesans." It’s like hearing a great three-minute pop classic from someone else’s car radio in the middle of a traffic jam: melodic bliss surfacing above the din.

Merritt’s doleful baritone is employed to great effect on the brooding, lonely-guy balladry of "Mr. Mistletoe" and the horror moviemeets-romantic comedy of "Zombie Boy." But he swaps lead vocal chores throughout Distortion with Shirley Simms, a singer who longtime fans will recognize from her performances on the Magnetic Fields’ career-making 1999 three-disc set, 69 Love Songs. Merritt calls Simms’ voice "as pop as pop gets" and gives her some of the cleverest numbers, including "California Girls," a Beach Boys-style anti-anthem about murderous envy, and "The Nun’s Litany," a chastely rendered list of extremely naughty fantasies.

Stephin Merritt’s work attracts a wide-ranging audience, from connoisseurs of the American Songbook, for which Merritt is arguably making some serious 21st Century contributions, to indie rock fans who admire his innovative use of chamber instrumentation and his deadpan humor. Tickets to Magnetic Fields’ winter ’08 American tour, a series of residencies in several major cities, sold out upon announcement and more dates have been added to meet the demand. NPR chose Merritt as the first artist on its new All Songs Considered feature, Project Song, in which a performer is given a specific picture and phrase and challenged to compose and record a new song about them within 48 hours; Merritt’s "Man Of A Million Faces" is now available at npr.org, along with video clips of the song-making process. Distortion joins an already eclectic catalogue of Merritt-helmed projects on Nonesuch: Magnetic Fields’ 2004 Nonesuch debut, i; The Gothic Archies’ A Tragic Treasury, a collaboration with Lemony Snicket author Daniel Handler; Showtunes, a compilation of works composed for the theater; and the soundtrack to the Oscar-nominated film, Pieces Of April.

The Magnetic Fields Photos

More from the Magnetic Fields

69 Love Songs [BOX SET] [LIMITED EDITION]

i

Holiday

Get Lost

The Charm of the Highway Strip

The Wayward Bus/Distant Plastic Trees

69 Love Songs, Pt. 1

69 Love Songs, Pt. 2

69 Love Songs, Pt. 3

The House of Tomorrow [EP]

I Thought You Were My Boyfriend: Remixes [SINGLE]

Holiday
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Merge Records
Release Date : 1999-01-12
Artistopia's Price :$9.99
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I
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Nonesuch
Release Date : 2004-05-04
Artistopia's Price :$11.99
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Album Summary
Cd in very good condition. Jewel case has a few scratches. Ships 1st class.
Charm of the Highway Strip
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Merge Records
Release Date : 1994-04-18
Artistopia's Price :$9.99
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Sweet and sour, incurably romantic, and deeply misanthropic, Magnetic Fields' mastermind Stephin Merritt is a one-of-a-kind voice in modern lo-fi pop. This 1994 outing is a bit of a departure, with Merritt taking his trademark ABBA-styled Casio-pop for a spin in the country--literally. Awash in lush, Nashville-ready production, songs like the doleful "Lonely Highway" (which encompasses snatches of the Lee Hazelwood classic "Jackson") and "Born on a Train" are nothing short of thrilling. But much of this particular stretch of the Fields is lacking in charm, since Merritt's wry stance chafes a bit too hard against the guileless melodies. Completists may feel compelled to take a ride, but novices should probably stick to the more urbane journeys offered by Holiday and Distant Plastic Trees. --David Sprague
Get Lost
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Merge Records
Release Date : 1995-10-24
Artistopia's Price :$9.86
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Their classic 1994 full-length contains thirteen songs from the worst year of Stephin Merrit's life. One of the best selling records in the Merge catalog. Remastered and re-sequenced by Merritt himself. 180 gram vinyl. Includes coupon for MP3 download of entire album in its new sequence.
69 Love Songs 1
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Merge Records
Release Date : 1999-09-07
Artistopia's Price :$11.99
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No Description Available.
Genre: Popular Music
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 7-SEP-1999
Wayward Bus & Distant Plastic Trees
Music Artist : Magnetic Fields
Music Label : Merge Records
Release Date : 1995-01-23
Artistopia's Price :$12.20
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