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Childish Prodigy (Bonus Track Version)

Kurt Vile

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iTunes Editors’ Notes

After a handful of recordings of varied strength and style (Fahey-finger picking, lo-fi wooziness, mainstream flirtations), Philly’s Kurt Vile (his real name) returns with a set of tunes almost as diverse. Childish Prodigy is as hard to nail down as Vile himself (he’s also a member of War On Drugs); gritty, grinding tracks like the Cramps-ish “Hunchback” and “Freak Train” are tempered with his own brand of hazy, forlorn lo-fi pop (à la Atlas Sound). There’s vulnerability beneath the tarp of reverb threatening to smother the life out of these songs, and that vulnerability is mostly in Vile’s voice, which can run the gamut from a genteel, lost soul to a gravel-throated threat. Tracks like “Overnight Religion” and “Amplifier” are full of ambience and longing, and when Vile chants, “I don’t care, I don’t care, I don’t care ....” on “He’s Alright,” you suspect he actually does. Guitars are strummed and plucked with economy, then woven into pleasing layers on the spare “Heart Attack” and “Blackberry Song,” but they howl with convincing splendor on “Monkey.” Childish Prodigy makes for a lively, if not slightly perplexing listening experience.

Customer Reviews

awsome

Ok so this sounds like Im walking in a forest and I stumble on to a bear that smiles and we dance around for the rest of time

OMG

This is the album Monsters of Folk meant to make—but didn't.
Excellent. Mysterious. One you'll love more each time you hear it, and I loved it a lot the first time.

my favorite album of 2009

This is definitely my favorite album of 2009. It's a good amout of psychedelic while still being relatively straightforward and understandable. The recording quality is excellent, despite have a low fi feel the vocals are still clear. The sounds are diverse while maintaining a cohesive style unique to Mr. Vile.

Biography

Born: January 3, 1980 in Lansdowne, PA

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Philadelphia songwriter Kurt Vile was already recording himself at home by age 14, shortly after his bluegrass-loving father purchased him a banjo to encourage his youthful creativity. By age 17, Vile was self-releasing cassettes of his home recordings, which in the earliest days were strongly influenced by the raw slacker pop of the Drag City roster. He would continue to record...
Full Bio

Customer Ratings

Contemporaries