*** Welcome to piglix ***

Heartland (Owen Pallett album)

Heartland
Heartland (Front Cover).png
Studio album by Owen Pallett
Released January 12, 2010 (2010-01-12)
Recorded 2009, The Greenhouse, Reykjavík (except tracks 3 and 12)
Genre Baroque pop
Length 46:40
Label Domino
Producer Owen Pallett
Owen Pallett chronology
Plays to Please
(2008)
Heartland
(2010)
A Swedish Love Story
(2010)
Singles from Heartland
  1. "Lewis Takes Action"
    Released: January 2010
  2. "Lewis Takes Off His Shirt"
    Released: March 29, 2010
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic (76/100)
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
The A.V. Club (A-)
Clash (7/10)
Drowned in Sound (8/10)
The Guardian 3/5 stars
MusicOMH 4/5 stars
NME (7/10)
Pitchfork Media (8.6/10)
PopMatters 4/5 stars
Slant 4.5/5 stars
The Times 4/5 stars
XLR8R (8.5/10)

Heartland is the third full-length album by Canadian indie rock artist Owen Pallett, released January 12, 2010 on Domino Records. It's the first of Pallett's records to be released under his own name. Since the album was his first to be released in Japan, he wished to avoid generating confusion with the Final Fantasy video games from Square Enix, and to avoid infringing on any trademarks. Pallett stated that his previous albums will be repackaged and reissued under his own name at some point.

The record was mixed by New York producer Rusty Santos.

The album was a shortlisted nominee for the 2010 Polaris Music Prize.

As a prelude to the album, Pallett recorded an EP, Spectrum, 14th Century. Both the EP and the subsequent full-length are set in an imaginary realm called Spectrum. The songs on Heartland form a narrative concerning a "young, ultra-violent farmer" named Lewis, commanded by an all-powerful narrator—named Owen. According to Pallett, the songs are one-sided dialogues with Lewis speaking to his creator.

In an interview, Pallett commented that the idea behind Heartland is "preposterous. I wanted to have this contained narrative that has the breadth of a Paul Auster short story." Michael Barclay of Maclean's states that the lyrics raise all sorts of theological questions about believers' relationship with a deity and the nature of fate, but the construct is just a blank canvas. Pallett said, "Really, it's just all about me. All records are about their singer. I was trying to play with that."

Pallett has noted that the album was "most inspired" by British electronic band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark.

The album received positive reviews. At 2010 year end, Heartland received Exclaim!'s No. 5 spot for best Pop & Rock Albums. Exclaim! writer Andrea Warner said Heartland's themes of anger, isolation and loneliness resonate, and the sonic nods to '70s disco and pop prove ridiculously catchy, bordering on radio-friendly."


...
Wikipedia

...