Every once
in a while, an album comes along that forces you to exclaim, "This is how this entire
genre should sound!"The Vitrolum
Republic's debut For Highbrow Sideshows and Rowboat Serenades is one of those
albums.Hailing from Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, this trio offers more to classic folk music than the likes of bigger
modern acts such as Bon Iver (QRO album review) or Fleet Foxes (QRO
album review)
ever could.
One cannot
help but notice FHSaRS's beautiful harmonies from the very beginning.There's something in the way that the
three sing "Doo doodoo doowah" in the chorus of the opening track "Willow Song"
which instantly hooks the listener for the rest of the fifty-six minute
runtime, which goes by practically unnoticed.Through the use of the accordion, violin, and piano as well
as the standard acoustic guitar, The Vitrolum Republic are able to offer a
retro style rarely seen nowadays, sometimes giving them an almost gypsy-like
quality to their sound.
The
album's title is fitting, bringing the listener back to a classic, nearly
forgotten time during the early 20th Century.It reflects the era's general feeling of hope in times of
desperation, a cliché that many attempt for this modern generation but few pull
off this well.Tracks like "Sunday
Drive" act as a literal time machine into the past, swooning listeners over to
a simpler time with its catchy banjo melody.It effectively makes them yearn to throw their computers and
cell-phones down for just an hour and forgot about the stress of modern life in
favor of a simple Sunday afternoon drive with the top down.
This is an
album and a band that should not go by unnoticed.Two years in the making, the effort and talent put into this
record is blatantly obvious.For
Highbrow Sideshows and Rowboat Serenades universally transcends anything recorded
before it, dropping modern bells and whistles to display the core beauty of
music at its absolute finest.Folk
like this, put simply, does not exist like this anymore.Vitrolum, a fictional word invented by
the band, represents a conduit of expression, while Republic stands for the
other members they've played with as well as the audiences they play for.Rarely can one find a group with a more
fitting and deserving name.