What A Terrible World, What A Beautiful World
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What A Terrible World, What A Beautiful World

Original price was: £19.00.Current price is: £5.70.

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What A Terrible World, What A Beautiful World is The Decemberists seventh album. Its the bands most varied and dynamic work, both musically and emotionally.

Since their last album, The King Is Dead, which went to No.1 in the US, the band have contributed a song to The Hunger Games soundtrack and appeared in The Simpsons. Colin Meloy, the bands frontman, has also been working on the Wildwood series a narrative saga about two seventh-graders drawn into a hidden, magical forest, illustrated by his wife, Carson Ellis.

Many songs on the new record represent the more personal side of Colin Meloys songwriting, a change from the strong narrative thrust that characterized much of The Decemberists work. Writing books as this raw, fantastic narrator has been the outlet for that part of my brain, he says. Having a family, having kids, having this career, getting older all of these things have made me look more inward. So some of these songs are among the more intimately personal songs Ive ever written.

Perhaps most notable is 12-17-12, a song named for and inspired by the date that President Obama addressed the nation following the Newtown school shootings and read the names of the victims. I watched that speech and was hit by a sense of helplessness, but also the message of Hold your family close. This bewildering, conflicted feeling came out in a phrase near the end of the song what a terrible world, what a beautiful world that gave the album its title.

Ultimately, What A Terrible World, What A Beautiful World found its final form, a distillation of the best things about this remarkable band. A new way of working led to a renewed excitement about the next chapter for The Decemberists. Ive never lived with a record for so long, says Colin Meloy, documenting my shifts and changes as a songwriter, with a real sense of time passing. And theres something very freeing about working on music with absolutely no agenda, and just letting the songs become themselves.

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