Beirut – The Rip Tide

Zach Condon’s music often parallels the exotic mysteries of world travel. Since Beirut’s last album, 2007’s The Flying Club Cup, sang a love-letter to France (with a 2009 stop-off in Mexico for the March of the Zapotec EP), many asked where his songs would voyage next, but few predicted the inward journey Condon takes on The Rip Tide, an album with the most introspective and memorable songs of his young career.

Recorded in Upstate New York, Brooklyn and, of course, Condon’s hometowns of Albuquerque and Santa Fe, The Rip Tide marks a distinct leaping-off point for Beirut. Beginning life as small melodies conceived on piano or ukulele, the songs were built upon by the entire band in the studio before Condon’s paring down and retrofitting. The results sound like they were recorded in a single session, with exciting rhythms matching the upbeat horns and contrasting the mournful strings. No direct geographical affiliation was exhumed; rather, the style that emerges belongs uniquely and distinctly to Beirut—one that has been hinted at all along.

Lyrically, Condon’s deep honesty outstrips the simplified nomadic troubadour image of his past. The tracks speak of love, friendship, isolation and community, touching on universal human themes that are less fabricated stories than impressions of life at a quarter-century of age. This dramatic shift expands Beirut’s palate without weighing down the music. “Santa Fe,” a jumpy ode to the town of his youth, is the best pop song he has written yet. Of particular note is “Goshen,” a torch song that wraps itself in Condon’s delicate piano phrases at a level of intimacy never heard before on a Beirut song.

The performances of the band—Perrin Cloutier on accordion, Paul Collins on bass, Ben Lanz on trombone,Nick Petree on drums and Kelly Pratt on horns—are spot-on. With contributions by such esteemed colleagues as violinist Heather Trost (A Hawk and a Hacksaw) and Sharon Van Etten, The Rip Tide reveals greater levels the more the listener explores. And one need not even travel very far.

 

• First pressings of LP and CD in a special foil-stamped, clothbound edition

• Vinyl includes download postcard


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BEIRUT – Gulag Orkestar

While it may sound like an entire Balkan gypsy orchestra playing modern songs as mournful ballads and upbeat marches, Beirut’s first album, Gulag Orkestar, is largely the work of one 19-year-old Albuquerque native, Zach Condon, with assistance by Jeremy Barnes (Neutral Milk Hotel, A Hawk and a Hacksaw) and Heather Trost (A Hawk and a Hacksaw).

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Horns, violins, cellos, ukuleles, mandolins, glockenspiels, drums, tambourines, congas, organs, pianos, clarinets and accordions (no guitars on this album!) all build and break the melodies under Condon’s deep-voiced crooner vocals, swaying to the Eastern European beats like a drunken 12-member ensemble that has fallen in love with The Magnetic Fields, Talking Heads and Neutral Milk Hotel. (Click here to purchase the LP from Midheaven)

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BEIRUT – Lon Gisland EP

As a stopgap before his next record, Zach Condon brought his eight member orkestar into the studio and recorded these songs.

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If you’ve seen the band live, you’ve heard some of these songs, including “Elephant Gun” and “Carousels.” Also included is a full band rendition of “Scenic World” and some other fine surprises.

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BEIRUT – The Flying Club Cup

The highly anticipated follow up to Gulag Orkestar does not disappoint.

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Recorded by Zach Condon with a full band, guest stars like Final Fantasy’s Owen Pallet (who added lush string arrangements), and at a variety of locations, The Flying Club Cup is an expanse, glorious and enrapturing album which takes a nod towards the finest of France’s musical culture.

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BEIRUT – March of the Zapotec / Holland

Double EP collection March of the Zapotec/Holland is perhaps Beirut’s most ambitious outing to date, culminating a year where the musical focus was split deftly and smoothly down the middle. MOTZ finds Zach and the boys in Oaxaca, Mexico.

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With the help of the 19 piece Band Jimenez, they craft their most beautifully melancholic songs to date, creating an astounding link between the oompa sounds of Eastern Europe and their Mexican counterparts. Holland is a return to Zach’s pre-Beirut bedroom recordings moniker, Realpeople. An exploration into the shimmery waters of synth pop and 90′s house, Holland proves that a musically restless soul doesn’t quite travel from one country to the next, but instead follows the sounds that speak to it most truly.

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