Amor and Language


Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Hard on Through the Summer" | 2:29 |
2. | "The Ballad of Younis and Sofia" | 4:33 |
3. | "Luster" | 2:21 |
4. | "Ai" | 2:43 |
5. | "T (I, II)" | 5:48 |
6. | "A-A-Allegories" | 2:03 |
7. | "The Wind" | 3:14 |
8. | "Stil de grain brun" | 2:09 |
9. | "The Letter" | 3:23 |
Background
Personnel
Musicians
David Grubbs, George Hurley, John McEntire, Albert Oehlen, Jim O'Rourke, Stephen Prina, Mayo Thompson, Tom Watson
Artists, etc
Consuelo & Meme, Tricia Donnelly, John Elder, Margo Leavin, Steve Linn, Sharon Lockhart, Franz Schnaas, Alex Slade, Steven Wong
Cover art
The cover photo is by Christopher Williams. The model is Rachel Williams.
Chicago Tribune
August 3, 1995[1]
David Rothschild
There's nothing new about using sex to sell products, but there's something a tad ironic about the sight of supermodel Rachel Williams, semi-nude--on the back cover of The Red Krayola's new "Amor and Language" CD on Chicago's scrappy, independent Drag City label.
After wondering how Drag City pulled it off, on second and third glance, you discover that Williams is made to look as unglamorous and unsexy as possible, which clearly takes some doing. And you realize it's all a put-on.
At a party in Los Angeles earlier this year, The Red Krayola's Mayo Thompson was introduced to the model by a photographer friend, Christopher Williams (no relation). The photo shoot took place soon thereafter.
Had Thompson and the photographer been looking to sell more CDs, draping Williams like a corpse over what appears to be a garden weeding bench, dressed in army surplus pants and matching brassiere, definitely would not have been the ticket. So why waste a beautiful woman's time making her look like a G.I. Joanne blow-up doll?
"The whole thing is just completely ironic," says Drag City's Rian Murphy. "I would love to hear someone say--just because I'd know that I had a sucker then--that we were making some sort of sexist pay-off. It's got nothing to do with what it would seem at all."
Drag City is known for its deadpan, subversive leanings, and in the furthest realms of underground rock, it's often hard to tell what's intended to be funny and who the joke is on--or if all of mainstream culture is one long, running gag.
"It's warts and all on that particular spread ," says Murphy.
"It's definitely a comment on the objectification of art and turning one thing into something else for profit. "
The musical charms of "Amor and Language"--sort of a cross between the Lovin' Spoonful and the Discovery Channel--will probably be lost on those who buy it for the faux cheesecake on the back cover. But consciousness-raising was never a big business--and isn't that ironic.
Image gallery
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Poster
Reviews
"it's sonics alarmed the pressing plant enough to wonder if there were imperfections in the master"[2]
- Staten Island Advance - October 15, 1995