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Post by jaxxalude on Jan 17, 2007 11:36:01 GMT -5
AversionDntel Wraps Up AlbumJan 17, 2007Jimmy Tamborello -- usually known as "the other dude in The Postal Service" -- will drop his third Dntel album into stores this spring. Tamborello announced his next effort, Dumb Luck, will hit stores in late April from Sub Pop. The label, which is also the home to Tamborello's collaboration with Death Cab for Cutie front man Ben Gibbard, The Postal Service, signed Dntel this summer. Dumb Luck's track listing is: Dumb Luck To A Fault I'd Like To Know Roll On The Distance Rock My Boat Natural Resources Breakfast In Bed Dreams ===========================//======================= Their first album is a, um, indie-electronic minor classic. And with the surprise success The Postal Service had - and which itself helped Death Cab For Cutie -, it's legitimate to expect some relative bigger things from Tamborello, comercially speaking. Last Autumn's single featuring Mia Doi Todd, "Rock My Boat", was interesting. Hope it bodes well for the album.
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Post by jaxxalude on Mar 7, 2007 18:13:27 GMT -5
FREE MP3 of the title-track is made available by Sub Pop right here.
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Post by busyboy on Apr 12, 2007 4:22:33 GMT -5
Postal Service man discusses forthcoming projectDntel features Bright Eyes, Jenny Lewis The Postal Service's Jimmy Tamborello is set to release his third Dntel album later this month. NME.COM caught up with Tamborello to discuss 'Dumb Luck', which features collaborations with Conor Oberst of Bright Eyes, Jenny Lewis of Rilo Kiley, and Grizzly Bear, and is due out April 24. Tamborello dubbed the album "experimental techno-pop", and explained how he came to collaborate with Lewis and Oberst. "I met Jenny (Lewis) during The Postal Service album," Tamborello told NME.COM. "We live close to each other in Silver Lake so it seemed natural." "Conor (Oberst) was friends with Jenny so I ended up hanging out with him. I had a song without vocals and asked him if he'd be interested in doing them. So he came over and recorded it -- it was all pretty casual," he said. Tamborello said that the process for creating Dntel songs is similar to the technique he and Ben Gibbard utilise for The Postal Service. "I send (contributors) blank instrumental tracks with no instructions, and they provide the lyrics and vocals," he explained. "I only wrote lyrics for (the title track) 'Dumb Luck'." Tamborello recorded most of the instrumentation at his house in the Silver Lake neighbourhood of Los Angeles. "I'm still pretty lo-fi," he admitted. "I'm more comfortable recording at my house with things not being perfect." Tamborello explained why 'Dumb Luck' was five years in the making. "I'd get sidetracked easily doing other projects like The Postal Service," he said. "Also I had a lot of trouble making all the songs fit together and turning them into an album, so I put them away for a while until they all came together." "For a while I couldn't figure out why I was making music and I was feeling insecure because a lot of people were listening to me because of the success of The Postal Service," he admitted. "That's what 'Dumb Luck' is about." Despite the challenges he faced along the way, Tamborello said he's satisfied with the end result. "I'm happy with how it came out and I hope other people will be too," he said. "My ultimate goal is to figure out a new type of music. It hasn't happened yet, but maybe someday."
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Post by busyboy on Apr 25, 2007 4:03:09 GMT -5
Dntel, Dumb Luck Rating: 6.8
It's not fair to conflate art with its artist, or to assume that writers are always talking about themselves. As "Dumb Luck" opens Dntel's latest, with Jimmy Tamborello singing solo about how success is just a fluke ("it's dumb luck that got you here"), we shouldn't necessarily assume he's feeling sorry for himself over the gold-selling crossover smash he enjoyed as one half of the Postal Service, a project that began at the end of Dntel's last album as a singular collaboration with Ben Gibbard called "(This Is) The Dream of Evan and Chan".
But even as the pair traded subtlety for preciousness when launching their collaboration upon the teeming masses of postal workers, marketers, and prime-time drama soundtrack coordinators, Give Up hit its mark more often than Dumb Luck does. Of course, those are two completely different bands; it's a little more fair to compare this album with his last, 2001's A Life of Possibilities, as the two are so sonically close. Gibbard's not here, but guests like Conor Oberst, Jenny Lewis, Grizzly Bear, Lali Puna, and Mia Tai Dodd do contribute, lending vocals to Tamborello's unpredictable electronic pop. The tracks here have the same small surprises-- ear candy fighting with open spaces and dead air, clicks and pops parrying with naked and vulnerable emotions. But the guest's contributions are bit more incongruous this time around, and where Possibilities was haunting and desolate while being quite cathartic, Dumb Luck simply mopes through its duration.
The opener and title track shifts the focus to Tamborello's voice, and the song really is an acoustic ballad at heart, though there's plenty of drum pads and distorted winds howling over it. Grizzly Bear's contribution is barely noticeable to the largely electronic and heavily-treated "To a Fault", and "I'd Like to Know" reminds the most of Dntel's earlier work only because of Valerie Trebeljahr (Lali Puna)'s voice, whose icy ambiguity remains perfectly matched to Tamborello's coy, suggestive sonic palette. Not quite so with "Roll On", where Tamborello seems to act as a backing band rather than a collaborator. The finger-plucked guitar and plaintive speak-sing sounds like a cast-away from Lewis' recent album with the Watson Twins, Rabbit Fur Coat, with clicks and hisses that threaten to spill over the composition like an overstuffed sitcom closet as she cracks wise and faces hard facts (and clichés) about unrequited affection.
"Rock My Boat" skirts the line between Dntel's downtempo magic and soggy trip-hop, not helped by obvious acoustic plucking and inane lyrics ("where angels get their wings/where babies get their names" and similar tripe). Fog's appearance lends to the more sparse and adventurous "Natural Resources", with oscillating tones and the unexpected crooning of woodwinds, but Andrew Broder barely sings his was through its clumsy lyric. Conor Oberst is handed the "Evan and Chan" of the record with "Breakfast in Bed", with one bare, disorienting keyboard loop like a hearing test administered by a drunk that puts all the spotlight on his vocals. Oberst's performance is restrained and surprisingly palatable as he sings about the aftermath one night stand, but aside from a few golden details we can rely on him for (cleaning wine from coffee cups, or attentively making "sure you're breathing with a hand up to your nose"), the terminally heartbroken act was a little more believable than his sensitive gigolo.
While some of the album's songs are terrifically cloying, I can't call it a disappointment; it's more a case of diminishing returns. You could fall on the axiom that a happy song is much harder to write than a sad one, but Tamborello's already proved himself wildly successful at happy songs with the huge crossover success of Postal Service. Perhaps it's a case of the Postal Service's broad strokes communicating more than the finer brush of Dntel. Happiness is a far more complicated emotion on Dumb Luck; when it comes, it's fleeting, bewildering, and undeserved. But from a musical standpoint, I'd rather hear Tamborello fake his way through sounding happy than sitting dumbfounded and complaining when the real thing shows up.
-Jason Crock, April 25, 2007
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