Home
Mother Town Hall
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Mother Town Hall
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
Mother Town Hall
Current price: $19.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
Another unassuming treasure of a record from the mercurial English singer/songwriter,
Mother Town Hall
is a Victorian jangle pop horn of plenty, spilling over with wit, warmth, and timeless melodies. Listeners who were charmed by 2014's
A Trip to the Coast
will find much of the same here, as
Pritchard
continues to mine both Tin Pan Alley and Swinging London for the purest pop nuggets he can dig up. The resplendent "Saturn and Co." sets the stage with a narrative concerning a typically idiosyncratic,
-ian protagonist who may or may not be someone worth knowing. It's a familiar theme that's lent gravitas by a sneaky light/dark melody and
's distinctive voice, which falls somewhere between
Luke Haines
(
Auteurs
),
Robyn Hitchcock
, and
John Southworth
. Parts of the record, specifically the brass sections, were tracked in Northern France, and that Gallic influence sneaks its way into standout cuts like "Mont St. Michel," "Deja Vu Boutique," and the Creole-kissed "Vampire from New York." Still,
is unabashedly English and festooned with all of the fixings. The near liquid, tube vibrato/tremolo-led soft rock gem "My First Friendship" invokes
Gilbert O'Sullivan
by way of
Richard Hawley
, the like-minded and aptly named "September Haze" suggests a fondness for the
Clientele
(or vice-versa), and the sprightly and cocksure "Victorious" proves that
's penchant for chamber pop finery, much like
Ray Davies
', can coexist peacefully with working class swagger. With two albums released within two years of each other, and another apparently in the can,
seems to have left his wilderness years behind, and pop fans, of both the cult and mainstream varieties, are all the better for it. ~ James Christopher Monger
Mother Town Hall
is a Victorian jangle pop horn of plenty, spilling over with wit, warmth, and timeless melodies. Listeners who were charmed by 2014's
A Trip to the Coast
will find much of the same here, as
Pritchard
continues to mine both Tin Pan Alley and Swinging London for the purest pop nuggets he can dig up. The resplendent "Saturn and Co." sets the stage with a narrative concerning a typically idiosyncratic,
-ian protagonist who may or may not be someone worth knowing. It's a familiar theme that's lent gravitas by a sneaky light/dark melody and
's distinctive voice, which falls somewhere between
Luke Haines
(
Auteurs
),
Robyn Hitchcock
, and
John Southworth
. Parts of the record, specifically the brass sections, were tracked in Northern France, and that Gallic influence sneaks its way into standout cuts like "Mont St. Michel," "Deja Vu Boutique," and the Creole-kissed "Vampire from New York." Still,
is unabashedly English and festooned with all of the fixings. The near liquid, tube vibrato/tremolo-led soft rock gem "My First Friendship" invokes
Gilbert O'Sullivan
by way of
Richard Hawley
, the like-minded and aptly named "September Haze" suggests a fondness for the
Clientele
(or vice-versa), and the sprightly and cocksure "Victorious" proves that
's penchant for chamber pop finery, much like
Ray Davies
', can coexist peacefully with working class swagger. With two albums released within two years of each other, and another apparently in the can,
seems to have left his wilderness years behind, and pop fans, of both the cult and mainstream varieties, are all the better for it. ~ James Christopher Monger