Black Foliage: Animation Music

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Black Foliage: Animation Music album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 27   Total Length: 69:27

eMusic Features

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Scene: Athens, Georgia, 1980s-2000

By Andy Battaglia, eMusic Contributor

The idyllic little town of Athens, Ga., really does identify with kudzu and rusty train trestles and a surfeit of weird and endearing Southern-gothic charm—all the hallmarks that came to greet it after myths of its music scene started to spread. That began to happen in the early 1980s, when R.E.M. found an audience beyond crowds of fellow Georgians crammed into beery parties at discarded churches and clubs. When it came out in 1983, the… more »

They Say All Music Guide

If the preceding Dusk at Cubist Castle was the Olivia Tremor Control’s very own White Album, then the labyrinthine Black Foliage is their SMiLE — it’s an imploding masterpiece, a work teetering on the cliff’s edge between genius and madness. Torn at the seams between pop transcendence and noise radicalism, the group attempts to have it both ways, meaning teenage symphonies to God like “A New Day” rest uneasily alongside musique concrète-styled tape pastiches such as “Combinations” (which, along with the similarly styled, multi-part title track, is one of the many sonic motifs snaking its way throughout the record). There are at least enough ideas for five albums here, which is both Black Foliage’s strength and its weakness — it’s impossible not to get lost inside of the OTC’s swirling schizophrenia, and too often snatches of brilliance flash by too quickly to savor the moment. Moreover, with songs like “California Demise 3″ continuing the oblique narrative running through previous OTC records, the artistic statement the record is making (and there undoubtedly is one) is impenetrable at best. Still, with each of the band’s successive releases seeming like just part of a much bigger picture only now beginning to come into focus, maybe that’s the point. Ultimately, Black Foliage just might be an end-of-the-millennium appeal that speaks directly and solely to the unconscious. – Jason Ankeny

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