Flying Low | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Willard Grant Conspiracy |
Cover: | Willard Grant Conspiracy - Flying Low.png |
Released: | 1998 |
Length: | 58:12 |
Label: |
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Prev Title: | 3am Sunday @ Fortune Otto's |
Prev Year: | 1996 |
Next Title: | Weevils in the Captain's Biscuit |
Next Year: | 1998 |
Flying Low is an album by the American band Willard Grant Conspiracy, released in 1998.[1] [2] It was their first album for Rykodisc.[3] The band considered the album to be "swamp noir".[4]
The recording sessions involved the primary trio of Robert Fisher, Paul Austin, and Sean O'Brien, with many other musicians contributing in the studio, including Walter Salas-Humara. The band lost track of which musicians played on which tracks and decided to forgo credits.[5] Most of the songs used only string instruments and snare drum.[6] "House Is Not a Home (Palmdale, CA)" is about a man who returns to his family home to set it on fire. "No Such Thing as Clean" is about living with a drug habit.
The Boston Herald called the album "a gorgeous disc, offering sleek, slo-fi subtleties and chiming acoustic refrains... It's wrapped in lush but restrained passions as delivered by guitarist Robert Fisher's dusky voice."[7] The Boston Globe wrote that "the Willard Grant Conspiracy is a brilliant, evocative band that floats in the melancholic pool as do the Tindersticks, Nick Cave, and Mark Eitzel."[8] CMJ New Music Monthly noted that the songs "range from suicide waltzes to dynamic, jam-heavy thinking person's rock".[9]
The Washington Post determined that "as impressive as the atmospherics are ... Austin's chord changes are monotonous and Fisher's vocals tend to become as pompous as Jim Morrison's—though without the Doors' pop hooks."[10] The Observer labeled the band "a valuable addition to the slow-fi, alt. country scene inhabited by the likes of Lambchop and the Handsome Family."[11] The Times considered Flying Low to be "post-punk Americana".
AllMusic concluded that "at times, Flying Low is a little precious, but that only adds to its darkly attractive ambience." In 2024, Uncut placed Flying Low at No. 431 on its list of "The 500 Greatest Albums of the 1990s".[12]