Lovecraft in Brooklyn | |
Type: | single |
Artist: | The Mountain Goats |
Album: | Heretic Pride |
Released: | February 18, 2008 February 19, 2008 |
Genre: | Folk rock, Indie rock |
Label: | 4AD |
Producer: | Scott Solter, John Vanderslice |
Prev Title: | In the Craters on the Moon |
Prev Year: | 2008 |
Next Title: | Tianchi Lake |
Next Year: | 2008 |
"Lovecraft in Brooklyn" is the eighth track on the Mountain Goats' Heretic Pride album released in 2008 on 4AD.
The title refers to the fears of horror fiction writer H. P. Lovecraft during his residence in Red Hook, Brooklyn.
In an interview with io9's Charlie Jane Anders concerning the song's imagery, songwriter John Darnielle stated "Lovecraft in Brooklyn" "is not really about Lovecraft — it's sung by a guy who's identifying with Lovecraft at his most xenophobic and terrified. Why does that appeal? I think I'm just attracted to hermits in general — to people who don't feel like they're part of the world, who have a hard time feeling like they're really present in the same space as everybody else."[1]
Allmusics Steve Leggett called "Lovecraft in Brooklyn" "odd (and) lysergic" and noted that it "feels like the screenplay for a campy B movie monster flick given musical form, only, of course, it might be something else entirely."[2] Crawdaddy!s Jessica Gentile called "Lovecraft in Brooklyn" "muscular, electric, and imbued with paranoia" and "by far, the heaviest song the band’s ever recorded."[3] Pitchfork Medias Zach Baron called "Lovecraft in Brooklyn" (alongside songs "Sax Rohmer #1" and "In the Craters of the Moon") a "seething throwback [...] taut, propulsive, paranoid, furious."[4]
Slant Magazines Dave Hughes found it to be "surprisingly assertive" and "awesomely angular."[5] Sputnikmusics Ryan Flatley noted its "staccato, yet catchy bass-line and Kayo Dot-esque violins."[6] Tiny Mix Tapess Judy Berman praised Darnielle's "talent for subtly coloring his lyrics with the voice of the frightened narrator", and in particular emphasized the line "woke up afraid of my own shadow / Like, genuinely afraid."[7] Cokemachineglow, however, found this same line to be "utterly, ridiculously superfluous" and "a bad line" that "rings false".[8]
For 2013's SF Sketchfest, John Darnielle performed "Lovecraft in Brooklyn" along with "The Best Ever Death Metal Band" for the podcast Judge John Hodgman.[9]
American hip hop music artist Aesop Rock remixed the song including additional lyrics. Musician John Darnielle called it a "completely great from-the-ground-up remix."[10] [11]
The Morning News's Erik Bryan called the collaboration "strange. Darnielle’s lyrics and vocals make it not the chillest groove, even as Aesop Rock’s mix tries to force it in that direction, which may be precisely akin to the paranoid displacement H.P. Lovecraft felt upon moving to New York."[12]
"Lovecraft in Brooklyn" (Aesop Rock Remix) ]
. . 22 September 2014 . 8 May 2008 . unfit . https://web.archive.org/web/20081006161311/http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/download/50532-video-the-mountain-goats-ft-aesop-rock-lovecraft-in-brooklyn-aesop-rock-remix . October 6, 2008 .