It took three years but I finally found the proper follow-up to Midlake’s The Trials of Van Occupanther in John Grant’s Queen of Denmark. Man, I can’t believe I’d never listened to this album. It’s filled with Midlake’s penchant for creating these wooded landscapes and D&D-lite atmosphere, but since it’s NOT their album the melancholy is based not on a renaissance fair, but the renaissance of ones soul. That soul would be John Grant. Grant fronted the Denver band Czars for years before they broke up in the mid-2000s. He took a break from music for a couple years before touring with Flaming Lips and then Midlake as a back up musician. Czars were on Bella Union, who Grant made Queen of Denmark for. Midlake also being on Bella Union became his backing band in the studio. Whether this was happenstance or they all just really got along I don’t know. All I know is that they made an album back in 2010(yes, this album…Queen of Denmark) that was overwhelming with emotion, melacholy, and longing.
Grant is openly gay, and this plays a big part in the lyrics. You can’t listen to a song like “Jesus Hates Faggots” and not get caught up in the kind of rough time this guy had growing up. “Silver Platter Club” sounds like Harry Nilsson and his wonderful “Good Old Desk”. All done up in piano jangle and 1930s flair complete with a horn section, it talks about not living up to the ideal of what a “man” should be. Wishing you were good at sports cause, well, that’s what a guy’s supposed to be good at. “Where Dreams Go To Die” is lilting and filled with the kind of overwhelming heart-on-sleeve bravado that Matt Berringer fills every National album with. Rufus Wainwright wishes he’d wrote this song. I know he does.
John Grant has a smooth and warm baritone that is classic-sounding in the best way possible. It pulls you into his world and envelopes you in words offered openly and honestly. He also displays a sense of humor in songs like “Sigourney Weaver” and “Chicken Bones”. But having Midlake backing you and building your songs from the ground up with a steady flow of piano, flute, acoustic sheen, and an overall “wall-of-sound” nothing ever comes off as tongue-in-cheek. There’s nothing fast-paced here, but it all comes off as big and orchestral. It’s like baroque pop, or chamber pop folk. Use either one you want.
So in my quest to find some albums that passed me by this was a pleasant surprise. I actually found this as I was checking out John Grant’s new album Pale Green Ghosts. A much different affair more electronic-based. I will definitely give that some ear time as well, but right now it’s all about Queen of Denmark.
9 out of 10
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I shouldn’t have listened to ADULT. before I read this. I can’t make the switch, can’t transition out of this frenzied frankenstein noise.
My head might explode.
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Yeah, come back to it later when your phasers are set to chill instead of destroy.
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I’m so sorry to have contributed to your mind explosion. Jalapeños and red velvet cake just don’t go together (metaphor or fake wisdom)
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This is SO smooth and flowing. It’s what I wish Antony Heagarty sounded like.
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Smooth and flowing definitely. Much more grounded than Antony.
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Maybe Dana will consent to replacing her beloved Antony with John Grant. Probably not, but I can hope!
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If not replace, maybe substitute on every third Monday of the month?
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I like it!
Not just a writer/critic/musician, he’s a musical therapist, too!
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I like to help people…it’s what I do.
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Grant’s new album hasn’t convinced me yet, mainly because it is such a departure from his debut. But he will always be one of my favourite musicians because he once played live in Berlin and said something like, ‘I won’t do an encore because that’s stupid. I will get up and pretend that the show is over, then I will stand backstage and pray that enough people clap only to appear again and play another two or three songs. Forget that, I play my whole set and that’ll be it.’ – I loved it. Also, the title-song is one of the greatest songs ever that always pops in my mind when I am angry at someone. Plus, “Sigourney Weaver” got me into a legit laughing-fit when I heard it for the first time (which was live, so, a little uncomfortable).
I also feel that I have to listen to Adult now…
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I haven’t spent enough time with the new one yet, but it’s definitely not hitting me like Queen of Denmark. It’s a genuinely moving record with great lyrics, both funny and heartfelt.
I feel the same way about encores. They just sweat their asses off for 2 hours. What more do we need?
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