Of Natural History

Of Natural History
Studio album by Sleepytime Gorilla Museum
Released October 25, 2004 (2004-10-25)
Recorded 2003-2004 at Polymorph Recording,[1] Oakland, California
Genre Avant-rock/metal
Progressive rock/metal
Length 71:52
Label Mimicry Records
Producer Dan Rathbun & Sleepytime Gorilla Museum
Sleepytime Gorilla Museum chronology
Grand Opening and Closing
(2001)
Of Natural History
(2004)
In Glorious Times
(2007)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [2]
Pitchfork Media (7.3/10)[3]
Stylus Magazine [4]

Of Natural History is the second album by Avant-rock/metal group Sleepytime Gorilla Museum. It was recorded and mixed at Polymorph Recording in Oakland, California during the years 2003 and 2004. Whereas on the first album, Grand Opening and Closing, Dan Rathbun handled the mastering (in addition to producing, recording, and mixing), on Of Natural History the mastering duties are handled by Justin Weis, who mastered the album at Trakworx, San Francisco.

All the tracks on this album were produced by Rathbun & the other members of the band, except for "Phthisis", which was produced by Scott Humphrey, and recorded at the Chop Shop, Hollywood in May 2004; Chris Baseford engineered the recording sessions, while Garry Raposo and Vincent Piette assisted in engineering.

Interestingly, like with the first album, this album again marks the transition from one drummer to another: Frank Grau, who replaced David Shamrock after the first album, left after this album, and Matthias Bossi took the drummer's position and has held it since then (Bossi plays different instruments on the tracks "Phthisis", "FC: The Freedom Club" and "Gunday's Child").

Contents

Music

Of Natural History continues on the same diverse and eclectic musical lines as its predecessor, with even more new elements, like Intelligent dance music ("Bring Back the Apocalypse") and funk and jazz ("Gunday's Child"). Other elements include heavy metal ("The Donkey Headed Adversary of Humanity Opens the Discussion" and "Pthisis"), progressive rock ("FC: The Freedom Club" and "Babydoctor"), country music ("Cockroach"), folk music ("The 17 Year Cicada"), as well as many more. Also notable is the incorporation of a plethora of field recordings[5] and samples into the songs and interludes.

Of Natural History has a continuity in the sense that all the songs sequence into each other, thus holding the narrative element(s) of the album better together along the album. The continuity and the coherent feel make Of Natural History very close to a concept album. While the lyrics themselves differ much from song to song, the underlying imposing mood is concerned with the apocalyptic implications caused by human presence on earth; to offer different viewpoints on this, SGM create their own characters and stories (tracks 1 & 2, both of which are a continuation of a story created already on the first album that was non-musical) and borrow from Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Unabomber, Muriel Rukeyser and Kenneth Patchen (tracks 3, 5, 6, and 9, respectively) in addition to own lyrics.

According to the band's official website, Of Natural History is in part a "debate between two contradictory pillars of 20th C. Anti-Humanism: The Futurists versus the Unabomber."[6]

Track listing

  1. "A Hymn to the Morning Star" - 5:40
  2. "The Donkey-Headed Adversary of Humanity Opens the Discussion" - 6:01
  3. "Phthisis" - 3:44
  4. "Bring Back the Apocalypse" - 4:10
  5. "FC: The Freedom Club" - 10:48
  6. "Gunday's Child" - 6:56
  7. "The 17-Year Cicada" - 3:41
  8. "The Creature" - 6:00
  9. "What Shall We Do Without Us?" - 2:38
  10. "Babydoctor" - 13:59
  11. "Cockroach" - 2:12
  12. (Hidden Track) - 5:56

Personnel

Notes

  1. ^ Except for one track and the field recordings used on the album; see the beginning of the article for more information on this.
  2. ^ Allmusic review
  3. ^ Pitchfork Media review
  4. ^ Stylus Magazine review
  5. ^ The field recordings on this album were done by Neil Yamagata and Carla Kihlstedt.
  6. ^ Sleepytime Gorilla Museum
  7. ^ Sleepytime Gorilla Museum uses a lot of homemade instruments. See the main article about the band.