Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Arcade Fire released sophomore album Neon Bible

First posted 8/17/2010; updated 9/8/2020.

Neon Bible

Arcade Fire


Buy Here:


Released: March 6, 2007


Peak: 2 US, 2 UK, 11 CN, 7 AU


Sales (in millions): 0.44 US, -- UK, 1.06 world (includes US and UK)


Genre: alternative rock


Tracks: (Click for codes to singles charts.)

  1. Black Mirror (1/22/07, –)
  2. Keep the Car Running (3/19/07, #32 MR, 56 UK, 41 CN)
  3. Neon Bible
  4. Intervention (5/21/07, #81 UK)
  5. Black Wave/ Bad Vibrations
  6. Ocean of Noise
  7. The Well and the Lighthouse
  8. Antichrist Television Blues
  9. Windowsill
  10. No Cars Go (8/6/07, #85 UK)
  11. My Body Is a Cage


Total Running Time: 47:03

Rating:

4.243 out of 5.00 (average of 6 ratings)


Quotable:Neon Bible takes a few spins to digest properly, and like all rich foods…it’s as decadent as it is tasty.” – James Christopher Monger, All Music Guide


Awards:

About the Album:

“When Montreal’s Arcade Fire released Funeral in 2004, it received the kind of critical and commercial acclaim that most bands spend their entire careers trying to attain. Within a year the group was headlining major festivals and sharing the stage with U2 and New York City’s ‘two Davids’ (Bowie and Byrne), all the while amassing a devoted following that descended upon shows like sinners at a tent revival, engaging in the kind of artist appreciation that can easily turn to a false sense of ownership.” JM

“On their alternately wrecked and defiant follow-up, Neon Bible, one can sense a bit of a Wall being erected (Win Butler’s Roger Waters/ Bruce Springsteen/ Garrison Keillor-style vocal delivery notwithstanding) around the group. If Funeral was the goodbye kiss on the coffin of youth, then Bible is the bitter pint (or pints) after a long day’s work.” JM

“The brooding opener, Black Mirror, with its sinister ‘Suffragette City’-inspired groove and murky refrain of ‘Mirror, Mirror on the wall/ Show me where them bombs will fall,’ sets an immediate world-weary tone that permeates that majority of Neon Bible’s Technicolor pages.” JM

“As expected, those sentiments are amplified with all of the majestic and overwrought power that has divided listeners since the group’s ascension to indie rock royalty, but despite a tendency toward midtempo balladry and post-fame cynicism, they’re anything but dull. It’s the triumphant orchestral remake of live staple No Cars Go and the infectious Keep the Car Running – the latter sounds like a 21st century update of John Cafferty & the Beaver Brown Band’s ‘On the Dark Side’ – that will most appeal to Funeral fans, and when the bottom drops out a minute and a half into the pipe organ-led Intervention and Butler wails ‘Who's gonna reset the bone,’ it’s hard not get caught up in all of the dystopian fervor.” JM

Black Wave/ Bad Vibrations and The Well and the Lighthouse continue the band’s explorations into progressive song structures and lush mini-suites, the thunder-filled Ocean of Noise is reminiscent of Bossanova-era Pixies, and the stark (at first) closer My Body Is a Cage straddles the sawhorse of earnest desperation and classic rock & roll self-absorption so effortlessly that it demands to be either turned off or all the way up.” JM

Neon Bible takes a few spins to digest properly, and like all rich foods (orchestra, harps, and gospel choirs abound), it’s as decadent as it is tasty – theatricality has never been a practice that the collective has shied away from – but there’s no denying the Arcade Fire’s singular vision, even when it blurs a little.” JM

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