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Blueberry Boat

Blueberry Boat
The Fiery Furnaces - Blueberry Boat.png
Studio album by The Fiery Furnaces
Released July 13, 2004
Recorded 2004
Genre
Length 76:09
Label Rough Trade
Producer Matthew Friedberger, Nicolas Vernhes
The Fiery Furnaces chronology
Gallowsbird's Bark
(2003)
Blueberry Boat
(2004)
EP
(2005)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 70/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
Blender 2/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly A−
The Guardian 2/5 stars
Los Angeles Times 3.5/4 stars
NME 1/10
Pitchfork Media 9.6/10
Q 4/5 stars
Rolling Stone 2/5 stars
Spin C

Blueberry Boat is the second album by American indie rock band The Fiery Furnaces. It was released on July 13, 2004, just over ten months following their debut album, Gallowsbird's Bark. Blueberry Boat polarized music critics due to its long, complex songs and esoteric lyrics.

More than twenty different instruments were used in the creation of this album, including the sitar, which was substituted for guitar on some songs. Keyboards, guitars, and drums are the main instruments used. As with all Fiery Furnaces releases, Eleanor Friedberger provides most of the vocals, with her brother Matt adding to a few songs. Matt is considered the main instrumentalist for the band, while both Friedbergers share lyrical duties. The album is more structurally complex than the band's debut, Gallowsbird's Bark, and most of the songs have distinct movements that sound like multiple songs combined.

The song "Straight Street" references the biblical "street called straight" in Damascus. "1917" features references to the 1917 World Series, the most recent series that the Chicago White Sox had won at the point this album was released.

Blueberry Boat garnered polarized but generally positive reviews. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from critics, the album received an average score of 70, which indicates "generally positive reviews," based on 34 reviews. In a rave review, Chris Dahlen of Pitchfork Media described Blueberry Boat as "a record for the overgrown part of our brain that craves engrossing complexity". Heather Phares of AllMusic wrote that the album "can be appreciated in the same way you would a puzzle box with intricate, endlessly shifting parts: you can spend a lot of time trying to unlock (or describe) its riddles, or just enjoy the artfulness behind them."


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