Another People Like Us album now available for free download over at UbuWeb:
http://www.ubu.com/sound/plu_welcome.html
Welcome Abroad {2011)
- Sing
- Happy Lost Songs
- Stuck in the USSR
- The Look
- Help Me To Help Myself
- What Will I Do
- Lost In The Dark
- Push The Clouds Away
- The Sound Of The End Of Music
- Wonderful Wonderful
- Driving Flying Rising Falling
- Ever
- Hush
- Wandering
- The Seven Hills of Rome (with Ergo Phizmiz)
- You’ve Got To Know When
- The Atlantic Conveyor
Release date: 24 May 2011
Illegal Art IA124 http://www.illegalart.net
Press release
“Welcome Abroad is the soundtrack to a dream – overlaying a cabaret with the circus, a music hall with the radio, a nightclub with the movies. Finely tuned sounds from the collective unconscious, fitted together with care and clarity and skill, producing a hallucinatory landscape that shifts and slides, shimmering with each new sample. Julie Andrews duets with Jim Morrison? Damn.” –Steinski
Vicki Bennett, under the People Like Us moniker, returns from several collaborations for her first solo album in several years. Stranded in the United States for an extended period after the Icelandic volcano eruption blocked her British homeland’s airspace, Bennett derived thematic material of displacement, travel, and a longing for elsewhere, from the natural disaster that caused her own predicament. Volcanically marooned in Baltimore and NYC, Bennett utilized some of her “free” time to work on the album and even gained audio contributions from fellow experimental musicians Jason Willett (of Half Japanese) and M.C. Schmidt (of Matmos) via her extended stay.
Taking a glance at just a few tracks from Welcome Abroad, songs from The Beatles, Ennio Morricone, Danny Kaye, Bob Dylan, Rod McKuen, Elton John, Gene Pitney, Elvis Presley, Dionne Warwick, John Denver, Julie London, and Queen are all amalgamated. While recent mashup culture often centers on the instant gratification of seamlessly juxtaposing hooks, People Like Us tracks transform the source material into collages that are equal parts dissonance and pleasure, making artful commentaries on our culture and Bennett’s own existential amusement within such a wondrous world.
Thanks to Ergo Phizmiz, Jason Willett, M.C.Schmidt (Matmos), Virginia Pipe and Wobbly for contributing instruments, audio parts and multitracking to this album.
Lyrics on The Seven Hills of Rome by Ergo Phizmiz.
Some of the tracks listed above also have a moving image representation in People Like Us in UbuWeb Film
RELATED RESOURCES:
Ergo Phizmiz in UbuWeb Sound
Jon Leidecker (Wobbly) in UbuWeb Sound
People Like Us in UbuWeb Film