Of Montreal
The Gay Parade
Label ©  Bar None Records
Release Year  1999
Length  44:09
Genre  Indie
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  O-0007
Bitrate  192 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Old Familiar Way  
       2:25  
      2.  
      Fun Loving Nun  
       2:17  
      3.  
      Tulip Baroo  
       2:10  
      4.  
      Jaques Lamure  
       2:31  
      5.  
      The March Of The Gay Parade  
       2:55  
      6.  
      Neat Little Domestic Life  
       2:45  
      7.  
      A Collection Of Poems About Water  
       3:57  
      8.  
      Y The Quale And Vaguely Bird Noisily Enjoying Their Forbidden Tryst  
       2:40  
      9.  
      I'd Be A Yellow Feathered Loon  
       2:19  
      10.  
      The Autobiographical Grandpa  
       1:54  
      11.  
      The Miniature Philosopher  
       3:54  
      12.  
      My Friend Will Be Me  
       3:01  
      13.  
      My Favorite Boxer  
       2:08  
      14.  
      Advice From A Divorced Gentlemen To His Bachelor Friend Considering Marriage  
       3:04  
      15.  
      A Man's Life Flashing Before His Eyes While He And His Wife Drive Offa Cliff  
       5:21  
      16.  
      Nickee Coco And The Invisible Tree  
       0:48  
    Additional info: | top
      Pop fans rejoice: Here's yet another delightful concept album from a member of the Elephant Six family, Of Montreal, who actually hail from Athens, Georgia. Of Montreal are more like third cousins to the E6 clan; their sound is cohesively pop oriented and distinctively quaint. The songs are bouncy, keyboard- and vocal-driven gems that collapse barbershop harmonies and well-enunciated, Tin Pan Alley vocalizations with Anglo mid-'60s pop (especially that of the ever-popular Kinks). The lyrics on Of Montreal's third full-length weave an intricate story in childrens-book logic, with invisible trees, a miniature philosopher, and a cast of hundreds. The words from the buoyant "Fun Loving Nun" (whose chorus appears to have been sung by the mice from Babe) can be seen as The Gay Parade's moral: "Some of us get covered up by the world, become bitter from our loneliness and forget our dreams." --Mike McGonigal
    Links/Resources | top