Lycanthropy

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (47 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 51:25

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a personal favorite 3

spontaneouscombustion333

I absolutely adore Patrick Wolf's music, I've yet to hear anything that comes close to it in a sort of "experimental" genre. I think it's amazing that he plays most of the instruments himself. Tracks most worth noting on this album: Don't Say No, and Paris. And to answer the previous review's question, the theme of the wolf is a multi-dimensional metaphor. He wrote most of this when he was younger, so Lycanthropy (transforming of a werewolf) is symbolic of transforming as a person into who you want to be, child into adult. or at least that's what it means to me. and the most obvious part. it's his last name.

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What part of this has anything to do with wolves?

mumeino

If someone had told me that there was such a thing as Gay-Eurotrash-ElectroDJ-Wolf packs I would never have believed them until now. That's the only possible explanation for Richard's upbringing by wolves. This album is boring and I'm particularly confused about why this is classified as alt punk. All it takes to be alt punk is not sounding like punk these days from the looks of it.

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They Say All Media Guide

Patrick Wolf has no insecurities about his last name, identity, and supposed upbringing among animals. In fact, Lycanthropy (the belief that one is a wolf) begins with a wolf’s howl. None of this, however, should detract from his formative compositions. This debut is relentlessly resourceful, never failing to reveal a new instrument (accordion, violin, recorder, to name a few). Augmented by laptop, Wolf’s curious stories come to fruition with his accent-thick vocals and dark, biographical lyrics. After (what else?) “Wolf Song” secures roots in his Irish blood, he explores inner conflicts of war and peace (“Peter Pan” and “A Boy Like Me,” his most accessible track), a newfound life in Paris (the percussion-heavy “Paris”), gender (“Lycanthropy”), and child molestation (“The Childcatcher”). Known to keep a bird’s nest in his hair, this young, eccentric prodigy is well beyond his years, making the most from a completely unusual childhood. – Kenyon Hopkin

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