Happy Hollow
File:HappyHollow.jpg
Studio album by Cursive
Released August 22, 2006
Genre Indie rock
Length 45:26
Label Saddle Creek
Producer Tim Kasher and Mike Mogis
Cursive chronology
The Difference Between Houses and Homes
(2005)
Happy Hollow
(2006)
Mama, I'm Swollen
(2009)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AbsolutePunk (90%)[1]
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars[2]
Alternative Press 5/5 stars[3]
ARTISTdirect 4/5 stars[4]
Filter (87%)[5]
Pitchfork Media (6.7/10)[6]
Sputnikmusic 4/5 stars[7]
Under the Radar (7/10)[8]

Happy Hollow is the fifth album by the American indie rock band Cursive. It was released on August 22, 2006 on Saddle Creek Records. Saddle Creek Records began shipping pre-orders on August 8, 2006. The album is named after an affluent neighborhood in Omaha, Nebraska.

The album is the first since the departure of cellist Gretta Cohn[9] whose instrumentation was a fixture of the band's 2003 release The Ugly Organ. The album features significant five-piece horn arrangements courtesy of Nate Walcott.[10]

The lyrics of Happy Hollow form a concept album of sorts, revolving around a small town and its inhabitants, and dealing with concepts such as religious dogma and hypocrisy.

This album came with a download code to download the songs in mp3 format directly from Saddle Creek Records. Pre-orders of the album came with a miniature license plate that had a code to download a bonus track entitled "No News Is Bad News".


Contents

Concept [link]

The album revolves around a small, upper class, God-fearing town of the same name (the name Happy Hollow coming from the affluent Omaha, NE neighborhood surrounding Happy Hollow Blvd). Each track in the album tells a different story of faults that the inhabitants of Happy Hollow portray that seem at odds with the town's "perfect" image. The final track, "Hymns for the Heathen," is an afterword of the album, describing the concepts explored in each of the 14 tracks.

The album has many biblical references, reflecting on Kasher's Catholic upbringing.

Track listing [link]

No. Title Length
1. "Opening the Hymnal / Babies"   2:32
2. "Dorothy at Forty"   3:02
3. "Big Bang"   3:56
4. "Bad Sects"   3:39
5. "Flag and Family"   2:56
6. "Dorothy Dreams of Tornadoes"   2:54
7. "Retreat!"   3:57
8. "The Sunks"   2:53
9. "At Conception"   2:57
10. "So-So Gigolo"   3:43
11. "Bad Science"   2:40
12. "Into the Fold"   4:16
13. "Rise Up! Rise Up!"   3:22
14. "Hymns for the Heathen"   2:39

References [link]

  1. ^ AbsolutePunk review
  2. ^ Happy Hollow (album) at Allmusic
  3. ^ Alternative Press No. 218
  4. ^ ARTISTdirect review
  5. ^ Filter Magazine No. 21
  6. ^ Pitchfork review
  7. ^ Sputnikmusic review
  8. ^ Under the Radar No. 14
  9. ^ Cellist Gretta Cohn leaves Cursive
  10. ^ Cursive talks about upcoming full length

External links [link]


https://wn.com/Happy_Hollow_(album)

Happy Hollow

Happy Hollow may refer to:

  • Happy Hollow, a cleft in south side of Missouri River bluffs upstream of confluence of Kaw R. where slaves escaping Little Dixie tobacco plantations around Weston, Missouri, could stop running, being in Free Kansas, and said to be original cause of American Civil War, and is now owned by linear descendant of abolitionist John Brown
  • Happy Hollow, a township in Champlain, Ontario, Canada
  • Happy Hollow, a neighborhood in Omaha, Nebraska, USA
  • Happy Hollow Boulevard, a road in Omaha, Nebraska, USA
  • Happy Hollow (album), the fifth album by the American indie rock band Cursive
  • Happy Hollow Park & Zoo, a small zoo and amusement park in San Jose, California, USA
  • Happy Hollow Historic Site in Prattville, Alabama, a site of historic significance in African-American desegregation in the 1950s.
  • Podcasts:

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