Carnelian | |
Type: | Studio |
Artist: | Kill the Vultures |
Cover: | Carnelianktv.jpeg |
Genre: | Hip hop, alternative hip hop |
Label: | Totally Gross National Product, F to I to X |
Producer: | Anatomy |
Prev Title: | Ecce Beast |
Prev Year: | 2009 |
Carnelian is the fourth album by Minnesota hip hop group Kill the Vultures.[1] [2]
It was the group's first new album in six years.[3] The album was released on October 23, 2015 by the Minnesota labels F | X and Totally Gross National Product.[4] [5] The album was particularly well-received in Europe, where it was named on a number of 2015 best-of-the-year lists.
In an interview with Minneapolis alt-weekly City Pages, Casselle said that the album reflected his personal life, having gone through a divorce and raising a child since the previous Kill the Vultures record, 2009's Ecce Beast, as well as a commentary on the state of the world. Musically, the album features complex, jazz-inflected instrumentation including flute, sax, cello, piano, and gamelan. Rather than use traditional samples, Lewis composed the music himself, recorded it with session musicians, and remixed them into material for the album.[6]
Before the album's release, the group put out the single "The Jackyl", which featured Channy Leaneagh of the alternative rock band Poliça, Casselle's ex-wife.[7] On October 12, 2015, a music video for the song "Topsoil" was released on YouTube via F to I to X.
The website Hip Hop Golden Age named Carnelian one of its 100 essential jazz rap albums, calling it "the epitome of (Kill the Vultures') innovativeness, with its ominous use of saxophones, trumpets, flutes, violins, cellos, guitars, double basses, and percussion. This is avant-garde jazz hop at its finest".[8] Carnelian was also named No. 16 in a list of the top 20 Minnesota records of 2015 in the Star Tribune's survey of Twin Cities music critics. [9] Reviewing the record for City Pages, Diane Miller called Carnelian the group's "most ambitious, bizarre, musical, and brilliant record to date," and that Casselle "raps of injustice, hypocrisy, and evil with conviction, imagination, and confounded relatability."[6] Amoeba Music called Carnelian "essential hip hop listening."[5]
The album was particularly well-received in Europe. English website The 405 praised Carnelian as "the most concise and rewarding album of (Kill the Vultures') career."[10] London-based website The Monitors named Carnelian one of its top records of the year, calling it "adventurously jazzy" and saying that it was "probably the most musically exciting hip-hop album of 2015".[11] Italian music magazine Blow Up called Carnelian " a very hard, dark album with a dense and heavy sound" and said that Kill the Vultures was "a group that still has a lot to say".[12] Italian music website Il Mucchio rated the album 8 out of 10,[13] named it Album of the Month for December 2015, and placed it on its year-end Best of 2015 list. It also made 2015 best-of-the-year lists for the French websites Trois Couleurs and Alternative Radio, Czech music blog Silver Rocket, Italy's Never Mind the Bee Stings, and German website Auftouren.[14]
Notes
Credits adapted from liner notes.[15]
Kill the Vultures
Other musicians
Technical personnel