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Personnel: Chantel Gero, Joanne Degand, Shauna Callender, Tasha Gero (vocals); Liza Rey (harp); Owen Pallett (violin, strings); Markia Anthony Shaw (viola, strings); Mélanie Auclair (cello, strings); Laurent Ménard, Geoffrey Shoesmith, Jake Henry, Andreas Stolzfus, Margaret Gundara, Edith Gruber, Colin Stetson, Martin Wenk, Jacob Valenzuela, Pietro Amato (brass). Audio Mixers: Markus Dravs; Mark "Spike" Stent; Nick Launay. Recording information: Budapest, Hungary (2006); Eglise St. Baptiste, Montreal, Canada (2006); Hungarian National Radio Studios, Budapest, Hungary (2006); New York, NY (2006); St. James Anglican Church, Bedford, Quebec, Canada (2006); The Church, Quebec, Canada (2006). Director: Tracy Maurice. Editor: Michael Paert. Photographer: Christophe Collette. Almost three years after the Arcade Fire's 2004 full-length debut, FUNERAL, stunned indie-rock fans with its majestic scope and romantic ferocity, the Montreal-based ensemble returned with NEON BIBLE. Although the album lacks the from-out-of-nowhere punch of the former record, it serves as a fitting successor, with the group's sweeping sound enhanced by even more prominent layers of piano, organ, strings, and percussion. As on FUNERAL, married multi-instrumentalists Win Butler and Regine Chassagne share vocal duties, and their distinctive singing adds to the emotional weight of each song, from the urgent, bass-heavy "Keep the Car Running" to the brooding, cinematic "Black Waves/Bad Vibrations." And while the Arcade Fire's post-punk influences are still on display, they are more fully integrated into the band's ambitious aesthetic, as best evidenced on the lush, nearly operatic update of "No Cars Go," which originally appeared on its '03 EP. With its cathedral-like grandeur kept in check by the group's restless energy, NEON BIBLE features both slowly revealed charms and immediate thrills, easily making it one of the most impressive albums of early '07. When Montreal's Arcade Fire released Funeral in 2004, it received the kind of critical and commercial acclaim that most bands spend their entire careers trying to attain. Within a year the group was headlining major festivals and sharing the stage with U2 and New York City's "two Davids" (Bowie and Byrne), all the while amassing a devoted following that descended upon shows like sinners at a tent revival, engaging in the kind of artist appreciation that can easily turn to a false sense of ownership. On their alternately wrecked and defiant follow-up, Neon Bible, one can sense a bit of a Wall being erected (Win Butler's Roger Waters/Bruce Springsteen/Garrison Keillor-style vocal delivery notwithstanding) around the group. If Funeral was the goodbye kiss on the coffin of youth, then Bible is the bitter pint (or pints) after a long day's work. The brooding opener, "Black Mirror," with its sinister "Suffragette City"-inspired groove and murky refrain of "Mirror, Mirror on the wall/Show me where them bombs will fall," sets an immediate world-weary tone that permeates that majority of Neon Bible's Technicolor pages. As expected, those sentiments are amplified with all of the majestic and overwrought power that has divided listeners since the group's ascension to indie rock royalty, but despite a tendency toward midtempo balladry and post-fame cynicism, they're anything but dull. It's the triumphant orchestral remake of live staple "No Cars Go" and the infectious "Keep the Car Running" -- the latter sounds like a 21st century update of John Cafferty & the Beaver Brown Band's "On the Dark Side" -- that will most appeal to Funeral fans, and when the bottom drops out a minute and a half into the pipe organ-led "Intervention" and Butler wails "Who's gonna reset the bone," it's hard not get caught up in all of the dystopian fervor. "Black Wave/Bad Vibrations" and "The Well and the Lighthouse" continue the band's explorations into progressive song structures and lush mini-suites, the thunder-filled "OceaRolling Stone (p.82) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "NEON BIBLE is an aggressively gothic record, explicitly so in the pipe organ that soars over the hunger and wreckage in 'Intervention.'" Rolling Stone (p.108) - Included in Rolling Stone's "50 Top Albums of the Year 2007" -- "A seven-piece band that makes joyous noise out of fear and foreboding." Spin (p.85) - 4.5 stars out of 5 -- "NEON BIBLE actually matches the live show's scope and emotion....It feels carefully considered yet uncontrived, a bubbling mix of raw confusion and refined conviction." Entertainment Weekly (p.105) - "[T]he polyphonic swirl of strings, horns, and voices points toward transcendence." -- Grade: A- Q (p.107) - 5 stars out of 5 -- "[A] magical kingdom of noise that's equal parts Disney's FANTASIA and Echo and The Bunnymen's lavish OCEAN RAIN." Alternative Press (p.182) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[A]n effortlessly creative offering running from upbeat jangle-pop to understated, stripped down arrangements..." Magnet (p.90) - "Arcade Fire's raw passion and heartfelt ambition remain intact....An undeniable flame still burns." Q (Magazine) (p.89) - Ranked #01 in Q's "The 50 Best Albums Of 2007" -- "[G]reat records are made by great songs, and NEON BIBLE has riches aplenty..." Neon Bible Music | List Price | $14.98 (You save $2.93) | | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Post Rock CDs, Rock | | Label | Merge | | Orig Year | 2007 | | All Time Sales Rank | 2967  | | CD Universe Part number | 7371033 | | Catalog number | 50285 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Mar 06, 2007 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | The Arcade Fire | | Engineer | Markus Dravs; Scott Colburn | | Recording Time | 46 minutes |
Arcade Fire Neon Bible Songs Neon Bible Music Review Average Rating: (3.9 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Authentic Their sound is as original and alternative as few bands,the album itself full of reference to life/death,a must have for fans of good alternative rock and willing to listen to music in time.5 stars. Submitted by Cyrus (Dayville,Ct) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 3 of 3 found this helpful.
what's up with the production? this sounds muffled and echoes. obviously the production is intentional, and the lyrics are dark. still, I'd take their self titled cd's raw production over this, especially the no cars go re-run. Submitted by fittlomb (Sven, Sweden) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
An album that grows on you It has to be said that since Arcade Fire's début Funeral was released, not a week has gone by where the album hasn't found its way to my CD player. I have been looking forward to listening to Neon bible for a while, so when I actually purchased the album I felt a massive anti-climax. I was incredibly disappointed with the album, I listened to it three times on the day it came out and felt that the magic of Funeral had been superseded by something reminiscent of Bruce Springsteen's mid-eighties efforts. Feeling let down by the album, I still went to see them play in Manchester, and I am glad I did. Perhaps it was the atmosphere of the venue, or the maybe the alcohol that was in my bloodstream, but something clicked and the new songs sounded amazing.
My opinion of the album has changed since seeing the songs live. The album is a great effort, the songs are larger and more cinematic than the songs on Funeral, but this album isn't Funeral, and perhaps that is something that I was forgetting.
The album opens with the otherworldly Black Mirror, a song that reminds me of some of David Lynch's darker moments. The song at points feels like it's about to lose control, the layers of instruments swirling and building to one of Arcade Fire's signature crescendos. Keep the Car Running is perhaps closer to the Arcade Fire that we all know and love, a great tune and a great choice of single. Intervention is definitely the track that stands out, the use of a church organ sounds both over-familiar and fresh at the same time to create a song that is incredibly powerful. The album closes with the emotive My Body is a Cage, a song which is both heartbreaking and haunting, an excellent, if somewhat downbeat climax to a fantastic album. Lyrically, the songs act as a critique of institutions such as TV, the church, America, and war. They seem quite obvious targets, it is almost a cliché now to criticise America. It is only because the music is so good and the lyrics are so poetic that they can pull it off.
What struck me as odd about this album is the inclusion of re-recorded version of Us Kids Know from their début EP, only with added horn section and production so polished that you can see your face in it. It sounds amazing, but perhaps would have been better suited as a B-Side or released as a non-album single. A second album is not the place to be rehashing old songs, leave that for the greatest hits.
The main criticism of this album will always be that it is not Funeral. Neon Bible is one of those albums that slowly grow on you, it takes a little bit of effort to get into it, but it is definitely worth it.
Submitted by joncronshaw (Leeds, UK) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
The arcade fire are the best !!!! Fantastick album and they are a fantastick band !!! Submitted by daniel_lyons (wales) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
don't listen to the 1st review this is arcade fire, no doubt. if you listened to the first ep and funeral and enjoyed them, then do yourself a favor and listen to this album. it is worth it.
considerably darker, with a religious undertone, neon bible is more of a mature work, but somehow possibly more commercial than their previous works. Submitted by dylliesdad (El Paso, TX) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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