Lambchop / The Bible
Artist Lambchop
Album Title: The Bible
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Alternative & Punk: Art Rock
Format Vinyl (2)
Released 09/30/2022
Label Merge Records
Catalog No MRG804
Bar Code No 673855080413
Packaging Gatefold LP Sleeve
Tracks
The Bible (LP One)
A1. His Song is Sung (5:29)
A2. Little Black Boxes (4:43)
A3. Daisy (5:14)
B1. Whatever, Mortal (4:21)
B2. A Major Minor Drag (5:52)
B3. Police Dog Blues (5:56)
The Bible (LP Two) (Single Sided)
C1. Dylan at the Mousetrap (4:02)
C2. Every Child Begins the World Again (3:44)
C3. So There (5:20)
C4. That’s Music (5:08)
Date Acquired 07/24/2023
Personal Rating
Acquired from Amazon
Purchase Price 22.99

Web Links

All Music Guide Entry:
Bandcamp entry:
Discogs Entry:
Wikipedia Entry:

Notes

Notes:
Comes in gatefold jacket with printed inner sleeves.
With side D etching
Comes with a Download Card.

Credits:
Arranged By – Matthew McCaughan
Arranged By, Edited By, Programmed By, Beats, Producer, Written-By – Ryan Olson
Beats – Twit One
Beats, Programmed By – Jeremy Nutzman
Bells [Lutheran Bell Choir] – Bells Of The Lake Choir
Cello – Alastair Sung
Choir [Gospel] – Kim, Kim, and Harmony
Design – New Formalists
Double Bass [Upright Bass] – Cole Davis
Electric Bass – Alex Nutter, Chris Bierden, Jim Anton, John Fields, Matt Swanson
Electric Guitar – Evan Slack
Engineer [Additional] – Jeremy Ferguson, Michael Whitney, Tom Herbers
Harp – Bridget Kibbey
Horns, Arranged By [Horns] – CJ Carmen Cameieri
Mastered By – Huntley Miller
Mixed By – Josh Berg
Music Director [Bells Choir] – Bill Mathis
Music Director [Gospel Choir], Arranged By [Choir] – Derrick Lee
Piano, Arranged By, Programmed By, Electric Guitar, Synth, Beats, Turntables, Bongos, Producer, Written-By – Andrew Broder
Steel Guitar – Paul Niehaus
Violin – Tim Fain
Vocals [Throat Singing and Background] – Blake Morgan
Vocals, Guitar [Nylon], Arranged By, Written-By – Kurt Wagner

Companies, etc.:
Published By – 2 Packs Of Camel Wides
Published By – Pathetic Hindsight Music
Published By – Broderism Music

Reviews
All Music Guide Review by Mark Deming:

Kurt Wagner has been the uncontested leader of Lambchop since the group debuted in 1993, and while he clearly values the contribution of his many collaborators, his songs and his creative vision has always been the driving force behind their music. So one of the biggest surprises in Lambchop's 2022 album The Bible is how much he ceded control as it was being made. Wagner wrote the bulk of the lyrics while he was looking after his father who was struggling with a variety of health issues, and as he wrestled with his insecurities, he turned to musician Andrew Broder (who records under the moniker Fog) for help. Wagner invited Broder to improvise a series of piano pieces that he used as beds for his new songs, and then Broder and his production partner Ryan Olson took the material into the studio. Using a small army of Minneapolis-based musicians, they created the tracks that became The Bible. Despite all this, The Bible is audibly a Lambchop album; the auto-tuned mutter that has become Wagner's vocal trademark from 2016's FLOTUS onward is front and center here, and though the additional keyboards, soulful backing vocalists, and occasional interjections of dance-friendly beats are a change of pace, Broder has respected Wagner's melodic sensibility both in terms of his piano work and the overall tone of the album. All the outside help was in the service of an especially personal work from Wagner. The subtext of these songs is Wagner coming to terms with his spirituality, despite not being a religious person, and his belief that he's not alone in these feelings as he ponders the struggles that are a part of nearly everyone's life. In some of his songs (most notably "His Song Is Sung"), these feelings share the stage with coming face-to-face with his father's mortality, and the balance between sorrow, curiosity, and acceptance in Wagner's vocals tell an especially eloquent story all by themselves. It has been quite some time since Lambchop lived up to their old slogan "Nashville's most f-ed-up country band," but on The Bible, Kurt Wagner bravely steps into new territory both musically and lyrically, and it's a beautiful and frequently moving experience.
Cover 1
Cover 2
Cover 3
Cover 4
Cover 5
Cover 6
Cover 7
Cover 8
Cover 9