Modern Vampires of the City

Modern Vampires of the City
Studio album by Vampire Weekend
Released May 14, 2013 (2013-05-14)
Studio Downtown Studios in New York City; Echo Park Back House, Vox Studios in Los Angeles; Slow Death Studios in Burbank; Rostam Batmanglij's apartment
Genre
Length 42:54
Label XL
Producer
Vampire Weekend chronology
Contra
(2010)Contra2010
Modern Vampires of the City
(2013)
Singles from Modern Vampires of the City
  1. "Diane Young"
    Released: March 19, 2013
  2. "Ya Hey"
    Released: May 3, 2013
  3. "Unbelievers"
    Released: August 12, 2013
  4. "Step"
    Released: May 5, 2014

Modern Vampires of the City is the 2013 third studio album by American indie rock band Vampire Weekend. The group began to write songs for the record during soundchecks on the supporting concert tour for their 2010 album Contra. After a period in which each member explored individual musical projects, they regrouped and continued working on Modern Vampires of the City in 2011. With no deadline in mind, the band brought in an outside record producer for the first time, Ariel Rechtshaid, to record the album.

With Modern Vampires of the City, Vampire Weekend attempted to depart from the African-influenced indie pop style of their previous records. Broadly experimental, the album's sound was the result of a variety of unconventional recording assets, including pitch shifting. Subjects explored on the record include characters with adult responsibilities, reflections on growing old, mortality, and religious faith. Vampire Weekend titled Modern Vampires of the City after a lyric in the 1990 Junior Reid song "One Blood" and chose a Neal Boenzi photograph of the 1966 New York City smog event as the album cover, citing their haunting qualities as the reason for using them.

Modern Vampires of the City was released on May 14, 2013, by XL Recordings and debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, becoming Vampire Weekend's second consecutive number-one album in the United States. It received widespread critical acclaim and was named the year's best record by several publications; it was voted second in the annual Pazz & Jop critics poll. By December 2014, the album had sold 505,000 copies in the US.

Background and writing

The success of Vampire Weekend's second album, Contra (2010), established the group as "one of the past decade's great indie-rock success stories."[2] By the time their world tour for Contra ended, the band realized they had not taken a break in nearly five years.[2] During the break, each member pursued individual projects: Baio performed DJ sets and scored the Bob Byington film Somebody Up There Likes Me,[3] Batmanglij recorded solo material and produced tracks for Das Racist and spent time traveling India with three friends,[4][5] and Koenig collaborated with Major Lazer.[6] Koenig had broken up with his girlfriend shortly before the release of Contra and subsequently moved out of their shared apartment in New York.[4] Feeling "weird and aimless", Koenig attempted to stay in Los Angeles but he returned East after four months.[2][4]

By the time Vampire Weekend eventually regrouped in 2011, the band members had amassed plenty of material and made sure to take their time making a new record. Koenig and Batmanglij met several times a week to write songs, some of which they'd later scrap.[4] The pair took a "writing retreat" to Martha's Vineyard, where they bore down and composed several new tracks.[4] Working with no deadline in mind, the group began recording Modern Vampires of the City.[3]

Recording and production

Rostam Batmanglij, the band's multi-instrumentalist and producer
Ariel Rechtshaid, the album's co-producer

The songs for Modern Vampires of the City were recorded at several locations, including Downtown Studios in New York City, Echo Park Back House and Vox Studios in Los Angeles, Slow Death Studios in Burbank, and the apartment of Rostam Batmanglij, Vampire Weekend's multi-instrumentalist and producer.[7] Early drafts of the tracks "Obvious Bicycle" and "Worship You" were produced at OK Go frontman, Damian Kulash's old house in Chicago, before being taken to an official studio to work on. Batmanglij and Ariel Rechtshaid, the album's co-producer, used a pair of mirrored solid state MacBooks with UAD-2 Satellite Firewire Cards so they could take their recordings anywhere and work on them from separate locations with maximum ease.[8] The band credits Vox Studios with the defining special quality of the recordings, especially the use of their vintage analog tape machines, with Batmanglij remarking, "Much of the overall sound and approach to the album was being able to record the drums to tape on an old Ampex machine."[9] The group wanted a unique drum sound, and so they recorded in a room with high ceilings and had engineer David Schiffman use a "pretty non-conventional drum miking setup" in which a pair of Neumann U 47s were used as over head mics with RCA 77dx ribbon mics between the Neumanns and the drum kit for added texture. Tape recordings of the drums were then heavily treated and manipulated with Ableton Live plug-ins. Lastly, the band layered samples onto select portions of the drum recordings to accent or shape the finished tone.[9]

Modern Vampires of the City was an attempt Vampire Weekend to distance themselves from the sounds featured on their debut record and Contra. "Whenever we came up with something familiar sounding, it was rejected", said Rechtshaid.[9] Pitch shifting was a major component of recording the album. For tracks such as "Step", drums were recorded on a Varispeed Tape deck set to a lower speed so that they would play back faster and more high pitched. Drummer Chris Tomson would then re-record the drums playing to the sped-up recording to get an uptempo live take.[9] This second recording was then slowed back down to original speed to create an "underwater" effect. The effect is featured prominently on vocals as well. Ezra Koenig's vocals were run through Eventide H949 and 910 on tracks such as "Diane Young", with both the pitch and formant shifted changed to manipulate the sound of recorded vocals.[9] Bass guitar was also recorded straight to tape "with a fairly ambient miking approach where the mic was three feet away from the cabinet". Vocals were recorded with Soundelux U99 Microphones, in combination with 1176 Classic limiter plug-in, Fairchild 670 Compressor and Elektro-Mess-Technik 140 Plate Reverb, giving the vocals a quality Batmanglij described as "buttery".[8] For guitar sounds, Batmanglij chose not to mic his guitar and instead plugged his Les Paul direct-in to ProTools through a SansAmp Amp Emulation Pedal, a technique used by Jimmy Page.[9]

Vampire Weekend concentrated their efforts on giving each recording "warmth", feeling that modern digital recordings lacked the sound quality of older records.[9] In an attempt to make the tracks sound less harsh, the band and their recording engineers used a spectrum analyzer, Sonnox SuprEsser and heavily automated EQs to edit out harsher, colder frequencies and soften the mix. Vampire Weekend painstakingly listened to the record several separate times using technology from standard commercial iPod earbuds to professional equipment to ensure the record sounded nice regardless of equipment the listener owned.[9] Desiring to "check the relative warmth levels", the engineers would "go in and perform surgery and automate EQs" in order to make the mixes listenable. The band felt the finished product was something of a third chapter and a continuation of material explored in their previous two efforts. "We thought these three albums should look like they belong together on a bookshelf", said Batmanglij. "We realized that there are things connecting the songs across three albums, like an invisible hand was guiding us. It does feel like we've been able to create three distinct worlds for each album, and yet have them be interconnected."[9]

The title was taken from a lyric in Junior Reid's 1990 song "One Blood". Koenig, a fan of the song, found the phrase "Modern Vampires of the City" humorous but also "haunting" as a title for their album.[10] The cover art features an image taken by New York Times photographer Neal Boenzi, depicting a smog-shrouded, dystopian-looking New York City. Boenzi took the photo atop the Empire State Building in November 1966, when the city was plagued by a smog problem. Because of the subsequent rise in global air pollution, the band chose the photo believing it may have rendered "some kind of future".[4]

Music and lyrics

"Modern Vampires of the City is indeed a deeply God-haunted work ... [Ezra] Koenig doesn't give any indication he himself is a believer (more often just the opposite), but there is a recurring sense of engagement with God throughout the album, a sense of wrestling with the implications and impossibilities of faith. By accident or, more likely, by design, this builds and builds until Koenig puts everything on the table and addresses God directly."

—Barry Lenser, PopMatters[11]

Modern Vampires of the City is a departure from the percussive, African-influenced indie pop of Contra.[12] Batmanglij said that the album has a recurring tension that distinguishes it from the band's previous albums: "Even if the songs are mostly in a major key, there’s something that’s hanging out there that’s a little bit dark. And I think that’s reflective of the world."[13] According to Heather Phares of AllMusic, the album abandoned the eclectic influences of Contra in favor of "a less audacious production style and smaller instrumental palette: guitar, organ, harpsichord, and the occasional sample combine into a rarefied sound that suggests a more insular version of their debut". She pointed to how the album is bookended by the stylistically narrow chamber pop on the songs "Obvious Bicycle" and "Young Lion".[14] "Step" was inspired by a lyric from Souls of Mischief's 1993 song "Step to My Girl", which sampled Grover Washington, Jr.'s cover of Bread's "Aubrey". The vocal melody of the chorus interprets the melody of "Aubrey" so close that the band had to clear it as a sample.[9] The chorus vocals were recorded in Ableton Live using the onboard microphone in Batmanglij's MacBook Pro.[9] Alexis Petridis viewed that some songs echo lesser known "musical tropes" from the group's previous albums—a mock Irish folk influence is heard on "Unbelievers", while "Step" features "Left Banke-inspired baroque pop".[15]

Much of the lyrics were composed by Batmanglij and Koenig in Batmanglij's apartment (a former factory building in Brooklyn) and at a rented cottage on Martha's Vineyard.[2] The lyrics explore more mature, world-weary themes such as growing old and disillusionment with American foreign policy.[12] The album eschewed the theme of privileged youth from their first two albums in favor of characters with adult responsibilities and reflections on the passage of time. Faith and mortality are recurring themes on songs such as "Unbelievers", "Worship You", and "Everlasting Arms".[13] Koenig likened their first three albums to Brideshead Revisited: "The naïve joyous school days in the beginning. Then the expansion of the world, travel, seeing other places, learning a little bit more about how people live. And then the end is a little bit of growing up, starting to think more seriously about your life and your faith. If people could look at our three albums as a bildungsroman, I’d be O.K. with that."[13] According to Brice Ezell from PopMatters, Modern Vampires of the City is "very much an indie rock record" because of Koenig's voice and diction, which reveals "the youth that he and his bandmates so often strive to shrug off." Ezell asserts that, on songs such as "Unbelievers", the "reckless abandon" expressed by the lyrics reveals "the group's grasp on the genuine rebellion that indie rock ought to strive for."[16]

Release and reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?8.2/10[17]
Metacritic84/100[18]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[14]
Entertainment WeeklyA−[19]
The Guardian[15]
The Independent[20]
MSN MusicA+[21]
NME7/10[22]
Pitchfork9.3/10[23]
Rolling Stone[24]
Spin8/10[25]
The Times[26]

Modern Vampires of the City was released by XL Recordings on May 14, 2013,[18] and debuted number one on the Billboard 200, selling 134,000 copies in its first week of release in the United States. It was Vampire Weekend's second consecutive number-one record on the chart, as well as the nineteenth independently-distributed album to top the Billboard 200 in the Nielsen SoundScan era (1991–present).[27] The record entered the British album charts at number three with first-week sales of 27,805 copies, becoming the group's third consecutive top-twenty album in the United Kingdom.[28] By December 2014, it had been certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America and sold 505,000 copies in the US.[29]

Modern Vampires of the City was met with widespread acclaim from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 84, based on 51 reviews.[18] In The Independent, Simon Price called it Vampire Weekend's "most cohesive and convincing effort yet" featuring their most accessible compositions,[20] while Ryan Dombal from Pitchfork said the singing suited the music fluidly on songs that sounded more natural and dynamic than the band's previous work.[23] Alexis Petridis, lead critic for The Guardian, believed Vampire Weekend successfully avoided the gimmicky sounds of their previous albums and wrote more genuine lyrics dealing with mortality rather than "arch depictions of moneyed young Wasp lives".[15] Slant Magazine's Jesse Cataldo said the songs may sound dense and wordy, but they would be "immediately potent on a purely visceral level" for listeners, "striking a perfect balance that makes for what's perhaps the best album of the year".[30] Nathan Brackett of Rolling Stone said the album featured a particular spirit and songcraft evocative of urban life,[24] while Robert Christgau appreciated how many twists the coming of age themes revealed. In his review for MSN Music, Christgau found the record similar to the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) because of how each lyric and musical element was "pleasurable in itself and aptly situated in the sturdy songs and tracks, so that the whole signifies without a hint of concept".[21] Greg Kot was more critical in the Chicago Tribune, writing that the group occasionally blundered in an attempt at ingenuity with the songs "Ya Hey" and "Finger Back" while finding the album "darker, slower and weirder" than their previous records.[31] NME journalist John Calvert believed Vampire Weekend had sacrificed "the sonic smarts that made them" on what was an otherwise "gorgeous album".[22]

By the end of 2013, Modern Vampires of the City had been named the year's best album in a number of polls; according to Acclaimed Music, it was the highest ranked record on average in critics' year-end lists.[32] AllMusic named it one of the year's 50 best records,[33] and it was voted the second best album of 2013 in the Pazz & Jop, an annual poll of American critics nationwide, published by The Village Voice.[34] Christgau, the poll's creator, ranked it first in his own list for The Barnes & Noble Review, writing in an accompanying essay that Vampire Weekend had made an art pop record that "simulates predigital warmth by tinkering with a dizzying panoply of studio stratagems and divides the most emotional songs of the band’s career into distinct parts impossible to enumerate due to how often the arrangements change up gorgeous drum tracks, but I dare you to dance to them".[35] At the 2014 Grammy Awards, Modern Vampires of the City won in the category of Best Alternative Music Album.[36]

Publication Rank List
American Songwriter 12 Top 50 Albums of 2013[37]
The A.V. Club 5 The 23 Best Albums of 2013[38]
Billboard 12 15 Best Albums of 2013[39]
11 20 Best Albums of the 2010s So Far (2010–14)[40]
Clash 9 Top Albums of 2013[41]
Complex 47 The 50 Best Albums of 2013[42]
Consequence of Sound 2 Top 50 Albums of 2013[43]
Drowned in Sound 6 Favourite Albums of 2013[44]
Exclaim! 4 Top 20 Pop & Rock Albums[45]
The Fly 32 Albums of the Year[46]
The Guardian 4 The best albums of 2013[47]
GQ 17 21 Best Albums of the 21st Century (2000–14)[48]
Magnet 19 Top 25 Albums of 2013[49]
Mojo 7 Top 50 Albums of 2013[50]
musicOMH 6 Top 100 Albums of 2013[51]
The New York Times 3 Top Ten Year-End List[52]
NME 14 50 Best Albums of 2013[53]
19 50 Best Albums of the Decade So Far (2010–14)[48]
Paste 7 The 50 Best Albums of 2013[54]
Pitchfork 1 The Top 50 Albums of 2013[55]
6 The 100 Best Albums of the Decade So Far (2010–14)[56]
PopMatters 1 The 75 Best Albums of 2013[57]
Q 2 50 Albums of the Year[58]
Rolling Stone 1 50 Best Albums of 2013[59]
Slant Magazine 1 The 25 Best Albums of 2013[60]
Spin 3 50 Best Albums of 2013[61]
60 300 Best Albums of the Past 30 Years (1985-2014)[48]
Sputnikmusic 17 Top 50 Albums of 2013[62]
Stereogum 3 The 50 Best Albums of 2013[63]
Time 2 Top 10 Albums of 2013[64]
Time Out 26 50 Best Albums of 2013[59]
Uncut 20 Top 50 Albums of 2013[65]
Under the Radar 1 Top 125 Albums of 2013[66]
The Village Voice 2 Pazz and Jop[34]

Track listing

All music composed by Rostam Batmanglij and Ezra Koenig, except where noted. All lyrics written by Koenig, except where noted.[7]

No.TitleLength
1."Obvious Bicycle"4:11
2."Unbelievers"3:22
3."Step"4:11
4."Diane Young"2:40
5."Don't Lie" (additional lyrics by Batmanglij)3:33
6."Hannah Hunt"3:57
7."Everlasting Arms"3:03
8."Finger Back"3:25
9."Worship You"3:21
10."Ya Hey" (bass line of bridge section written by Ariel Rechtshaid)5:12
11."Hudson" (music by Batmanglij, Koenig, and Chris Tomson)4:14
12."Young Lion" (music and lyrics by Batmanglij)1:45
Total length:42:54

Personnel

Credits adapted from the album's liner notes.[7]

Vampire Weekend

Additional personnel

  • Alex John Beck – band photo
  • Rich Costey – mixing (tracks 3, 4, 10)
  • Hans Crump – ProTools operator
  • Johnny Cuomo – flistle (track 2)
  • Jeff Curtin – additional drums and additional engineering (track 4)
  • Angel Deradoorian – back up vocals (tracks 1, 9, 12), additional vocal arrangement
  • Matt de Jong – packaging layout and booklet design
  • Fanny Franklin – back up vocals (track 8)
  • Justin Gerrish – ProTools operator, additional mix engineering
  • Michael Harris – engineer
  • Eric Isip – assistant
  • Scott Jacoby – mixing (track 2)
  • Chris Kasych – mix assistant and ProTools engineer
  • Shruta Kumar – score copyist
  • Joe LaPorta – mastering
  • Emily Lazar – mixing (track 2), mastering
  • Fernando Lodero – ProTools operator
  • Elizabeth Lea – trombone (tracks 2, 11)
  • Danny T. Levin – trumpet (tracks 2, 11)
  • Juan Pieczanski – additional engineering (track 4)
  • Ariel Rechtshaid – additional drum and synth programming (tracks 1, 2, 4, 11), additional bass (track 7), production, mixing (tracks 1, 5-9, 11, 12), engineering
  • Rich Rich – ProTools operator
  • Nick Rowe – engineer
  • Brendan Ryan – accordion (track 2)
  • Asher Sarlin – compact disc design
  • Adam Schatz – saxophone (track 4)
  • Dave Schiffman – engineer
  • Seth Shafer – tuba (tracks 2, 11)
  • Angelo Vasquex – ProTools operator

Charts

See also

References

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