Search

Happy Holidays
 
 

Indie-Rock-In-A-Box

Vinyl Club

Staff Picks

Gift Guide

Gift Cards

Free Shipping

 
 

New Releases

Top Sellers

Pre-Orders

Downloads

Vinyl

TShirts

Posters

Gifts

Lists

Insound 20

Bargain Bin

Help

Shopping Cart

 

Items

0

Total

$0.00
 

View Cart
Check Out
 
 

Ipod Boombox??!!

Ipod Boombox??!!

Syndicate Us

Read About RSS
 

Fair Ain't Fair (CD)

Tim Fite

[Cover]

Label:
Released: 2008 List Price: 15.98
Price: $15.18  
 
 
add to cart

A year in the making, following his critically acclaimed (and free for download) attack on materialism, Over the Counter Culture, Tim Fite continues expanding on his musical process, in which he treats the sounds in his head like construction paper as he cuts, pastes, and stacks notes and noises to build musical collages. While the last album mixed white-boy hip-hop and folk with a kaleidoscope of samples to earn quick comparisons to Mellow Gold-era Beck, Fair Ain't Fair has the feel of Tom Waits songs performed by the Eels and produced by a Grandaddy and Wyclef tag team. No raps to be found this time around. Instead, he sings in a surprisingly perfect pitch, with his vocal twang layered in three part harmonies, over modern-day country jigs and jingle-jangle melodies stylized with electronic bleeps and bloops. It's a sample-heavy album, but instead of dollar bin CD snippets acting as chief building blocks for the songs, they're the icing on a cake made of organic instrumentation. A dozen artists contributed to Fite's quest to turn his sparse musical ideas into wonderfully lush arrangements, including Shara Worden (My Brightest Diamond), Danielle Stech Homsy (Rio en Medio), and Sufjan Stevens' backing band. Drum parts were recorded overnight at Fite's old high school and tracked before he and his cast of performers added slack key guitar, chimes, piano, banjo, pedal steel, bass, mandolin, viola, and a potpourri of indecipherable sounds. The pop textures are more evident, the melodies are more hook-laden, and the overall vibe is more laid-back than past releases, varying in moods from positively gleeful to terribly melancholy. Even with the brunt of Fair Ain't Fair focused on the theme of post-apocalyptic regret, childish whimsy shines through (as expected from someone who authored an imaginative fairy tale titled {-Beans}): a slide whistle interrupts the apologies of "Yesterday's Garden" as he confesses "I guess you know that yesterday, I ran your garden over, girl," and silly chants of "a horse is a horse of course of course" and "Hey! Hey! Hay is for horses," lighten up the anti-consumer anthem "More Clothes." Like in previous albums, "Fist" continues to thumb his nose at greed and capitalism, ending "Sing Along," a "la la" song catchy enough to be his first radio single, with an afterthought, "This right here would sound real good, I think, personally...real nice for a car commercial or something...maybe something for Maxi Pads, you know, 'cuz a lot of people use 'em." It's both a jovial field day, and a provocative question mark aimed at society, showing that even someone with the creative flow of a seven year old can have a thought-provoking and mature release. ~ Jason Lymangrover, All Music Guide

Tracklisting
Disk  | 1 
1Roots of a Tree
2Trouble
3Barber
4Big Mistake
5Inside Man
6Rats and Rags
7Yesterdays Garden
8Thought I Was a Gun
9Names of All the Animals
10Motorcade
11More Clothes
12Harriet Tubman
13My Hands
14Heavis War
15Sing Along
16Line by Line

 

User Reviews

Do you already own this product and want to submit a review? Click here to submit your own review!

Weekly Newsletter

Sign Up
 

Radio Player

 
Los Campesinos!
"We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed"