Gideon Gaye

Gideon Gaye
Studio album by The High Llamas
Released 1994 (1994)
Recorded Late 1993 – early 1994[1]
Genre
Length 54:48
Label Target
Producer
The High Llamas chronology
Santa Barbara
(1992)Santa Barbara1992
Gideon Gaye
(1994)
Hawaii
(1995)Hawaii1995

Gideon Gaye is the second studio album by the Anglo-Irish avant-pop band the High Llamas, released in 1994 on the Brighton-based Target label.[1] Notable for anticipating the mid 1990s easy-listening revivalism,[4] the album's music was influenced by Brian Wilson, Steely Dan, Brazilian bossa nova and European film soundtracks,[5] and was recorded with a £4000 budget.[6] It was met with high praise by the British press, but drew little attention in the United States.[7]

Upon release, bandleader Sean O'Hagan responded to Beach Boys comparisons: "There are aspects that are blatantly Brian-esque, because I've always been a huge Brian [Wilson] fan. He has been the biggest influence in my career to date. I was always shy [about] how much I liked him, but this time I decided to be blatant about it. But then I'm also a huge John Cale fan."[8] The album's sleeve art is a homage to Van Dyke Parks' 1967 album Song Cycle, which uses the same Torino Italic Flair typeface.[9]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[10]

Scott Schinder of Trouser Press reviewed: "The result is a homespun, heartfelt art-pop masterpiece, with airy arrangements and gorgeous melodies in richly detailed tunes — 'The Dutchman,' 'Checking In, Checking Out,' 'The Goat Looks On' and the fourteen-minute 'Track Goes By' — that liberally quote Brian Wilson's lost classic [Smile] without sacrificing O'Hagan's purposefully playful point of view."[3] Writer Tim Page called the album "suffused throughout with a gentle wistfulness that is never made quite explicit ... [the album] is also intriguing on a purely formal level. The album's centerpiece is 'The Goat Looks On,' yet the entire disc might be described as a study of the creation of a song called 'The Goat Looks On.'"[1]

Critic Richie Unterberger opined: "It's an impressive outing that sounds like little else in the alternative rock world of the mid-'90s. But it only establishes O'Hagan and his various pals as charming emulators, rather than true innovators.[10] CMJ New Music Monthly's Steve McGuirl wrote of the album: "A tad academic, perhaps; but to dismiss Gideon Gaye as merely retro cheapens a beautiful record and the music that inspired it."[11]

Track listing

All tracks written by Sean O'Hagan.

No.TitleLength
1."Giddy Strings"0:27
2."The Dutchman"4:41
3."Giddy and Gay"4:55
4."Easy Rod"2:04
5."Checking in, Checking Out"5:45
6."The Goat Strings"2:06
7."Up in the Hills"4:57
8."The Goat Looks On"6:13
9."Taog Skool No"1:36
10."Little Collie"0:44
11."Track Goes By"14:13
12."Let's Have Another Look"0:50
13."The Goat"6:17
Total length:54:48

Personnel

Per AllMusic.[12]

The High Llamas

Additional staff

References

  1. 1 2 3 Page, Tim (January 10, 1999). "The High Llamas: A Different Breed".
  2. "Electronic Musician". Electronic Musician. Vol. 16. 2000.
  3. 1 2 Schinder, Scott (1997). "Hawaii". In Robbins, Ira A.; Sprague, David. The Trouser Press Guide to '90s Rock: The All-New Fifth Edition of The Trouser Press Record Guide. Simon & Schuster. p. 345. ISBN 978-0-684-81437-7.
  4. Kamp, David; Daly, Steven (2005). The Rock Snob's Dictionary: An Essential Lexicon Of Rockological Knowledge. Broadway Books. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-7679-1873-2.
  5. Mason, Stewart. "Checking in, Checking Out". AllMusic.
  6. Buckley, Peter, ed. (2003). The Rough Guide to Rock. Rough Guides. p. 494. ISBN 978-1-85828-457-6.
  7. Unterberger, Richie. "The High Llamas". AllMusic.
  8. Sexton, Paul (September 23, 1995). "High Llamas Hope to Scale U.S. Market". Billboard. p. 22.
  9. Henderson, Richard (2010). Van Dyke Parks' Song Cycle. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 104–. ISBN 978-1-4411-9619-4.
  10. 1 2 Unterberger, Richie. "Gideon Gaye". AllMusic.
  11. McGuirl, Steve (February 1996). "Gideon Gaye". CMJ New Music Monthly.
  12. "Gideon Gaye - Credits". AllMusic.
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