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Local music fixture Adam Bruneau creates his own Deerhunter videos.

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Longtime Atlanta music scene fixture Adam Bruneau has created videos for two songs from Deerhunter’s third full-length, Microcastle.

Bruneau has served in the local music community performing as an auxiliary member of dozens of local groups, including a short stint with Deerhunter, the Kiwis and Phonepunk; although it’s been a few years since Phonepunk made any appearances… Sadly.

The videos, for “Microcastle” and “Cover Me (slowly)” are posted on Adam’s blog, Rabbits Full of Magic.


Deerhunter - Cover Me Slowly from Adam Bruneau on Vimeo.

These are videos for songs from Deerhunter’s new album Microcastle, which has just come out on Kranky and 4AD records, and which is flawless and wonderful. I had talked to Bradford about doing some video and I knew this was a fall/winter record, so upon finding myself going up Borestone mountain in Maine in the middle of October at peak season for color-changing leaves, I captured the footage that ended up in these videos. Cover Me (Slowly) kept making me think of the beginning of Twin Peaks so when I found a waterfall at the foothills of the mountain I knew it was meant to be. I changed the tint to match some of the cover art, a pink picture of someone with a skull in their eye. I played with how the video synced to the audio a number of different ways before trying random alignments and finding parts in the original unedited footage that would line up with cues in the music. I find this to be a much more natural way of scoring video to audio and usually you end up with something nice you wouldn’t have thought of consciously. I really like Agoraphobia but didn’t want to make a video to that unless the band members were included in it.


Deerhunter - Microcastle from Adam Bruneau on Vimeo.

I was in the back seat of my aunt’s car going up Borestone mountain and riding to the spot where you get out before you hike up it, and playing with the video camera as it was zoomed in really far into the trees, which gave me the idea for the Microcastle video. The speed and variety of colors flying by reminded me of the rush you get at the end of this song, which is a soaring coda after a very peaceful and reserved verse section. For the beginning I wanted some kind of fall still life that shimmered with the sound of the song. The shimmering effect was pulled off by syncing the audio amplitude directly to the opacity of the image, and I ended up using footage from the top of the mountain. Climbing Mount Borestone was like a standard hike until the last couple hundred feet, which was pretty much a vertical climb up the face of the mountain and felt like an epic task. So once we got to the very top, and you could see all over Maine, everything got very still and quiet, and I found a little pool of water with a few plants growing around it. When I went through my footage to pick out what to use for Microcastle, it felt perfect; on top of that mountain on a bright fall day, it was a timeless, concrete, physical manifestation of the song.

Review: Deerhunter sobers up with Microcastle

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

Hard to believe that it hasn’t even been two full years since Deerhunter unleashed Cryptograms into the world. The ensuing Pitchfork obsession, constant touring and Bradford Cox’s Atlas Sound adventure have all left indelible marks on the group.

All of these things read like an impressionist’s diary entries lingering between every note, reverberating strum, and coo heard throughout the group’s third full-length, Microcastle (Kranky). From the epic, melancholy wail and fading guitar arch that opens the album in “Cover Me (Slowly),” it’s plain to see that this is not the same Deerhunter once personified by Cox masquerading in a dress.

Whereas Cryptograms propelled the group into the blogosphere with a full and confident stride, Microcastle is a world-weary album that’s somewhat damaged but not disheartened by experience. The album finds the group shedding the shoe-gazer fuzz and aggression of the past, but that’s not to say that it doesn’t come armed with some incredibly catchy pop hooks.

“Never Stops” and “Saved by Old Times” are bound by a sense of classic pop simplicity so uncomplicated that the subtleties and repeating cyclical structures of each song become addictive. Every second of the album is shrouded in a hue of ghostly and psychedelic fog, but Microcastle is not about sensory overload. It’s about nostalgia, reflection and growing up.

With its Stereolab-esque bouts of rhythms and droning, distorted harmonies, “Nothing Ever Happened” is the catchiest song on the record. It’s also the album’s most complex chapter that bridges the gap between Cryptograms and the here and now.

Despite the simplicities, the songs on Microcastle are rhythmically complex and therefore require patience. As such, the album isn’t the best place for Deehunter newcomers to start. But Microcastle is without a doubt a five-star record, and the departure from the avant-garde pop grind of Cryptograms serves the group well.

Deerhunter plays with Jay Reatard, Times New Viking and Pylon. $16. 8 p.m. Fri., Oct. 31. Variety Playhouse, 1099 Euclid Ave. 404-524-7354.

Deerhunter’s Microcastle is available on iTunes two months ahead of schedule

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

micro2.jpg

Deerhunter’s third full-length, Microcastle (scheduled to hit the streets in the US on Oct. 27th via Kranky and the rest of the world via 4AD on the 28th) was posted for download today on iTunes today.

The release dates for the physical product remain the same, but if you want to hear the songs, they’re out there.

The physical release comes with a bonus full-length, titled Weird Era Cont., and the album’s first single, a limited edition 7-inch featuring the songs “Nothing Ever Happened” b/w “Little Kids (Demo)” should be out anytime now.

Microcastle track list:
1. Cover Me (Slowly)
2. Agoraphobia
3. Never Stops
4. Little Kids
5. Microcastle
6. Calvary Scars
7. Green Jacket
8. Activa
9. Nothing Ever Happened
10. Saved by Old Times
11. Neither of Us, Uncertainly
12. Twilight at Carbon Lake

Deerhunter, Nine Inch Nails, Microcastle, tour dates et. al.

Friday, August 8th, 2008

When Deerhunter opens for Nine Inch Nails next Wednesday at The Arena at Gwinnett, it will be the group’s first show in Atlanta (or at least near Atlanta) with their new guitar player, Whitney Petty.

This will also be Atlanta’s first opportunity to get a substantial listen to the songs from the group’s forthcoming third release, Microcastle, which is set to hit the streets on CD and LP via Kranky in North America and 4AD for the rest of the world on October 28th.

The record release party for Microcastle will be held at The Variety Playhouse on Halloween night. Jay Reatard, Pylon and Times New Viking will open the show.

But if you can’t wait until Halloween and you don’t mind spending $30 on gas to get all the way out to Gwinett, and then spending another $39.50-$59.50 for a ticket, the Nine Inch Nails show on Wednesday looks to be pretty amazing.

By all reports the Lights in the Sky tour is one of Trent’s most insane stage shows yet; one that’s packed with visuals that surpass his 1993-’94 tour behind The Downward Spiral, which sounds too good to be true.

For a glimpse of what’s in store, take look…

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