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  1. “5 Songs” was The Decemberists first release, a CD EP in 2001. “The Tain” was an EP released around the time of “Her Majesty” and this coupling of the two was issued on vinyl as a MiniLP in 2004.

    “The Tain” is actually a single 18 minute long track split in to 5 parts. It’s based on the Irish mythical epic “Táin Bó Cúailnge”, often shortened to “The Táin”., it was also recorded in musical form by famed Irish band Horslips in 1973. It tells the story of a war against Ulster by Queen Medb of Connacht  and her husband King Ailill who intend to steal the stud bull Donn Cuailnge. Because of a curse upon the king and warriors of Ulster, the invaders are opposed only by the young demigod Cú Chulainn (although I gotta admit the lyrics don’t seem to directly address such a story!). A bit Prog Rock? You betcha it is! From its ominous opening section, head banging part 2, a mournful third bit, lullaby like part four and ending with a suitably rousing climax featuring guitar riffs that refer you back to part 1, Genesis or the Tull woulda been proud. It’s something I’ve had to get used to with The Decemberists (Prog is most definitely a dirty word in my world) but they do it with such a twinkle in their eye I can forgive them their proclivities.

    “5 Songs” in actuality contains 6 songs, the final “Apology Song” (originally sung into his friends answering machine after Colin Meloy had lost his pals bicycle) was added after the artwork had been finalised. The first song “Oceanside” still features occasionally in their live sets; “Shiny” contains a lyric about a “dull and witless boy”, the handle Meloy still uses online; “My Mother Was A Chinese Trapeze Artist" was recorded by Meloy’s previous band Tarkio; following the bouncy jangle-pop of "Angel Won't You Call Me", “I Don’t Mind” is the first Decemberists released song concerned with a common theme in their music, death and suicide (cheery huh ?), we will meet these subjects often.

    Here we have a band starting out and then starting on a long form of storytelling, an idea they will further develop a few years later on “The Hazards Of Love”. Not essential but I find it all very listenable.

    The Tain - https://youtu.be/i44Gc6N80mc

  2. On their second album The Decemberists expand their musical palette, adding horns, strings and bells. They continue to expand your vocabulary (dictionary moments include bombazine, dalliant and tarlatan), and introduce you to 19th century Neapolitan songs and 20th century American novelists. This isn’t just a band it’s an education.

    We begin with, well let’s be honest, “Shanty For The Arethusa” (it was a real ship BTW) is just that, a sea shanty, including details of the cargo, the destination and a warning about the sorts you’ll find on the crew. It’s a classic sea shanty that sailors sang to pass the time and get a bit boastful about themselves, a different stripe of folk song.

    A number of the songs here have a Dickensian atmosphere about them, something that hovers around much The Decemberists music. “The Soldiering Life” (including its reference to bombazine, a fabric made from silk and wool used in 18th and 19th century mourning dresses if you didn’t know. And this alongside references to pantaloons and stevedores, it’s gorgeous stuff) and “The Chimbley Sweep” have this about them, but that atmosphere doesn’t take over the whole album. 

    The other thing we find on “Her Majesty” is Colin Meloy continuing to grow as a songwriter. There are many examples here, “Billy Liar”, “Los Angeles I’m Yours” and “The Gymnast High Above The Ground” boom-boom-boom after the opening sea shanty really are something else. And a little later there comes another boom-boom-boom with “Song For Myla Goldberg”, the aforementioned “The Soldiering Life” and my personal highlight, “Red Right Ankle”.  

    “Red Right Ankle” is absolutely breathtaking. It’s the exact style of guitar playing I wish I’d applied myself to its mastery (I’m more of the Joe Strummer school myself, all six strings at once or none at all), it is gloriously melodious and has a lyric that confuses and delights equally. A paean to a joint and its limbs and their reliance on each other, a verse about Gypsy Uncles and hideaways in the Pyrenees, another about those “boys that loved you”, very probably the same ones Springsteen sings about in “Thunder Road”, and the only use of the word ventricle I’ve yet to encounter in popular song. I’ll flag this as Colin Meloy’s first great song.

    “I Was Meant For the Stage” and “As I Rise” close out the album in a gentle style. 

    Reading around blogs and message boards “Her Majesty” seems to fall way down the list of many fans favourites, it certainly isn’t their finest (which is also not saying it’s bad) but it has enough about it to ensure it gets a regular spin in my house. Oh and to save you the bother of searching, to be dalliant is to be flirtatious, tarlatan is another type of fabric, the 19th century Neapolitan song is "Funiculì, Funiculà" which is referenced in the song about 20th century author Myla Goldberg. Are you not now feeling educated ?

    Red Right Ankle - https://youtu.be/axkyYrismAw

  3. OK it’s time to settle in…we are now starting on a lengthy section where we will cover The Decemberists entire output. I’m somewhat obsessed with The Decemberists. It was, however, an obsession long in the making. Back at the beginning of the 2000’s, I would suppose 2002 when this album was originally released, my brother Miles told me I should have a listen to this album as he figured I would like it. I got as far as (legally) downloading a copy but for one reason or another I never got around to listening to it. Fast forward a decade or so and I was in my local at the open mic night when a fella I now only remember as Ian got up and played an absolutely fantastic song. When he’d finished I asked what it was to be told it was called “Don’t Carry It All” by The Decemberists. “Hang on” I thinks, that was the band Milo told me to have a listen to 10 years ago (!). So when I got home I dug up that (legally) downloaded copy I had stored away and had a listen, I loved it. So I then ordered a CD of the album Ian had played a song from, “The King Is Dead” and when that arrived I found I loved that too. An an obsession was born.

    For those unfamiliar with The Decemberists they are a 5 piece band from Portland, Oregon who are influenced particularly by English folk music and The Smiths. Now the latter of those two should put me right off but main-man Colin Meloy has taken that influence and fashioned it into something much more interesting. He’s a great, great songwriter and a fantastic lyricist, the number of times I’ve had to reach for a dictionary while listening to this band, I’ve lost count of.

    The very first song sets a template for The Decemberists that still holds today and also marks the first time I had to reach for the dictionary. “Leslie Anne Levine” is a folky lament concerning the titular character who is singing from the point of view of being the ghost of a newborn who was “Born at nine and dead at noon”. The dictionary moment is delivered by the line “Fifteen years gone now, Still a wastrel mesallied” where messallied seems to be derived from the French word "mésalliance" meaning a marriage to a person of inferior social standing. In second song, “Here I Dreamt I Was An Architect”, we hear of “The perfume that the air would bring to the indolent town”, I can’t think of another songwriter using language so beautifully. If you decide to start listening to The Decemberists get used to moments like this and an expansion of your vocabulary. 

    “Castaways And Cutouts” is a primarily acoustic based album, pedal steel guitars give it a country tinge in places, upright bass adds a hint of jazziness. Meloy is finding his way as a singer and a songwriter but there are goodies here and those, added to his wordsmithery, make it all a delightful listen. Certain lyrical themes are evident that work their way through the bands entire output, soldiering, death, star crossed lovers, seafaring (yer bog standard folk subject matter I guess) and these coupled with the language (I’m on about it again…“And here in Spain I am a Spaniard, I will be buried with my marionettes, Countess and courtesan have fallen 'neath my tender hand”) create an atmosphere of an older world, long gone. 

    This is not to imply that the music within is in any way “old fashioned”. “Grace Cathedral Hill” (“I'm sweet on a green-eyed girl, All fiery Irish clip and curl, All brine and piss and vinegar”) and the final “California One/Youth And Beauty Brigade” (“We're calling all bed wetters and ambulance chasers, Poor picker-pockets, bring 'em in”) are both quite breathtaking songs lyrically and melodically. It is a perfect mash-up of Folk and The Smiths that I suspect fans of either will find as engaging as I do. “Castaways And Cutouts” presents The Decemberists fully formed, from here on they hone their craft to heights that have kept me enthralled for some 15 years.

    Grace Cathedral Hill - https://youtu.be/82QuFhr_ABc