
BIG RED MACHINE 'HOW LONG DO YOU THINK IT'S GONNA LAST?' 2LP - RED
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Release Date: August 27, 2021
OPAQUE RED VINYL
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Check out the other Bon Iver vinyl we have in the shop.
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Tracklist:
Latter Days (feat. AnaĂŻs Mitchell)
Reese
Phoenix (feat. Fleet Foxes and AnaĂŻs Mitchell)
Birch (feat. Taylor Swift)
Renegade (feat. Taylor Swift)
The Ghost of Cincinnati
Hoping Then
Mimi (feat. Ilsey)
Easy to Sabotage (feat. Naeem)
Hutch (feat. Sharon Van Etten, Lisa Hannigan, and Shara Nova [My Brightest Diamond])
8:22am (feat. La Force)
Magnolia
Juneâs a River (feat. Ben Howard and This Is The Kit)
Brycie
New Auburn (feat. AnaĂŻs Mitchell)
Ever since childhood, learning to play various instruments in a suburban Cincinnati basement alongside his brother Bryce, Aaron Dessner has consistently sought an emotional outlet and deep human connection through music â be it as a primary songwriter in The National, a founder and architect of beloved collaboration-driven music festivals, or collaborator on two critically acclaimed and chart-topping Taylor Swift albums recorded in complete pandemic-era isolation at his Long Pond Studio in upstate New York, among many other projects. Through it all, Dessner has brought together an unlikely community of musicians that share his impulse to connect, celebrate and, most of all, process emotion and experience through music.
This generous spirit and desire to push music forward has never been more deeply felt than on Big Red Machineâs How Long Do You Think Itâs Gonna Last?, the second album from Dessnerâs ever-morphing project with Bon Iverâs Justin Vernon. In 2008, while assembling material for the charity compilation Dark Was the Night, Dessner sent Vernon a song sketch titled âbig red machineâ. Vernon interpreted âbig red machineâ as a beating heart and finished the song accordingly â a metaphor Dessner says âstill sticks with me today. This project goes to many places and is always on some level about experimentation, but it shines a light on why I make music in the first place, which is an emotional need. Itâs one of my therapies and one of the ways I interrogate the past.â
Released in 2018, Big Red Machineâs self-titled debut album evolved from improvisation and what Dessner calls âstructured experimentalism,â with an ear toward building tracks that would work well in a live setting alongside visual elements. When Dessner and Vernon started the Eaux Claires Music Festival in 2015, they staged the original âBig Red Machineâ as an improvisation-based performance piece. They later took that show to the PEOPLE collectiveâs Berlin residency and festival, and to Dessnerâs Haven Festival in Copenhagen. âBig Red Machine started as this thing we would do for fun, and we fell in love with the feeling of it,â says Dessner.â Vernon agrees: âI remember it feeling really easy, but we never knew what would happen. It was exciting. As time went on, we just kept doing things together. And our friendship has grown strong, alongside all the collaborative stuff.â
New Big Red Machine material began taking shape in spring 2019, when Vernon came to visit Dessner at Long Pond. The first week produced songs such as âReese,â â8:22amâ and eventual album opener âLatter Days,â a haunting number sung by Vernon and AnaiÌs Mitchell that set the emotional tenor for what was to come. âIt was clear to her that the early sketch Justin and I made of Latter Days was about childhood, or loss of innocence and nostalgia for a time before youâve grown into adulthood â before youâve hurt people or lost people and made mistakes. AnaiÌs defined the whole record
when she sang that, as these same themes kept appearing again and again,â Dessner says. In the ensuing months, Vernon and Dessner would meet up when they could, and in the meantime, Dessner developed the existing material and wrote new instrumental tracks which he sent Vernon, always eager to hear what he would receive back.
âJustin is incredibly gifted, but heâs also disruptive in the best way,â says Dessner, pointing to the first note of the song âBirchâ as a prime example. âItâs absolutely brilliant, but it was very surprising when I heard it the first time. I canât tell you what that interval is. There are many moments working with him where your head hits the wall in amazement like that.â
In the early stages of the pandemic, Swift approached Dessner to work with her on what would become the sister albums folklore and evermore. Dessner describes this period as a âcreative blur,â during which heâd be writing material for Swift and Big Red Machine simultaneously. âI think this was an intense growing period for me, I was learning so much from Taylor and the process. Along the way, I shared all of our unfinished Big Red Machine songs with her and she really found them inspiring and gave me so much positive feedback and encouragement,â he says. âI think that helped me realize how connected this Big Red Machine music was to everything else I was doing and that I was always supposed to be chasing these ideas. I was finding new sounds and ways of working through these songs. I just hadnât been able to finish them. So, I did.â
Beyond Vernon and Swiftâs encouragement, many of Dessnerâs previous collaborators and friends show up for him here, continuing the reciprocal exchange of ideas that has come to define his creative community. Songs feature guest vocals and writing contributions from artist friends including Fleet Foxesâ Robin Pecknold (âPhoenixâ), Ben Howard and This Is The Kit (âJuneâs a Riverâ), Naeem (âEasy to Sabotageâ), Sharon Van Etten, Lisa Hannigan and My Brightest Diamondâs Shara Nova (âHutch,â a tune inspired by Dessnerâs late friend, Frightened Rabbit frontman Scott Hutchison) and Swift herself (âBirchâ and âRenegade,â the latter an instant-classic Taylor earworm summed up by the poignant lyric âIs it insensitive for me to say / get your shit together so I can love you.â The song was recorded in Los Angeles at the Kitty Committee studio in March 2021, the same week when Swift and Dessner took home the GRAMMY for Album of the Year for folklore.)
âThis is all music I generated, but it is interesting to hear how different people relate to it, or how different voices collide with it,â Dessner says. âThatâs what makes it special. With everyone that's on this record, there's an openness, a creative generosity and an emotional quality that connects it all together.â
As he continued writing prolifically on his own, Dessner noticed a theme emerging -- the idea of sitting with the uncomfortability of personal and family darkness from his childhood and reflecting on how emotional issues he dealt with growing up have reverberated through his adult life. It became clear that some of these heâd need to sing himself; songs such as âThe Ghost of Cincinnatiâ and âMagnoliaâ address the disintegration of marriage and family and mental health, asking pointed questions of himself and those closest to him. âBrycieâ is an ode to his aforementioned twin and National bandmate, who picked up on the musical vibes immediately when Dessner played the song for him for the first time backstage at a National show in Washington D.C.
âHe picked along to it with me and it immediately sounded like Aaron and Bryce playing the guitar in the basement as kids, which was my intent,â Dessner remembers. âThe words mean a lot to me. Itâs about my childhood with Bryce, and how I had pretty severe depression in high school. He was the one who kept me going and took care of me until I was back on my feet. Iâve lost close friends to depression and this song is about how important it was that Bryce was there for me at that time and is still here.â In addition to being one of the more lyrically significant tracks on the album, Dessner says singing it himself felt like an important act of self-acceptance.
âI always sing under my breath when I write music, but I usually hand it off to [National vocalist] Matt [Berninger] or others" he says. âWhen you're in a band for so long and somebody else is that person, you come to rely on it and Iâve always loved Mattâs voice and his words. But singing âBrycieâ myself helped rewire my brain to realize that maybe Big Red Machine is the project that not only enables me to create songs with other people, but also sometimes finish songs on my own.â
Recalling sessions at Sonic Ranch in Texas when Dessner recorded his vocal takes, Vernon says, âAaron showed me âBrycieâ a couple years ago now. I was like, this is beautiful, and you should do more singing. Not only would it be good for the future of your songwriting, but your voice sounds really good to me. It was exciting to see him flourish in that way â to now be a part of that process and realize the hardships in that and also the victories. On this record, heâs leading the charge, wholly and completely.â
Musically, How Long Do You Think Itâs Gonna Last? features what Dessner calls maybe the âclearest distillationâ of his varying songwriting and production styles. Songs like âReese,â the Dessner-sung âMagnoliaâ and the elegiac âHutchâ are built on the kinds of tear-jerking piano melodies millions of fans have come to love from The National, but then move at their own pace toward unusual sonic destinations. âAaronâs greatest gift as a collaborator is his ability to evolve and experiment with the emotional sound that is so natural to him," Vernon says of the material.
Elsewhere, the dream-like âHoping Thenâ sets layered vocals by Vernon, Dessner and Hannigan (âItâs the on the edge of why I canât sleep soundlyâ) atop chopped and phased violin lines, programmed drums and countermelodies played on a rubber bridge guitar. His brother Bryceâs orchestration ebbs and flows throughout this song and many others. The main instrumental track of the chugging, groovy âEasy to Sabotageâ was stitched together from two different live recordings and later enveloped in warm keyboard textures and the head-nodding vocals of Naeem. âIt just feels alive and electric, and it just happened,â Dessner says of the song.
That sense of shared experience extended to the new albumâs title, which was coined by Swift after Dessner told her he wasnât sure what to call the new album. Intuitively summing up the themes, she suggested titling it âHow Long Do You Think Itâs Gonna Last?,â a question which she pointed out could refer to multiple subjects addressed therein: âchildhood, family, marriages, a depression, a losing streak, a winning streak or a creative streak. Taylor saw it all so clearly,â Dessner says. âA year ago, weâd never even worked together. Itâs so cool that this community keeps extending and that everyone who contributed to this album connected so naturally to the emotions at the heart of the music."
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Shipping & Returns
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Description
-
Release Date: August 27, 2021
OPAQUE RED VINYL
---
Check out the other Bon Iver vinyl we have in the shop.
---
Tracklist:
Latter Days (feat. AnaĂŻs Mitchell)
Reese
Phoenix (feat. Fleet Foxes and AnaĂŻs Mitchell)
Birch (feat. Taylor Swift)
Renegade (feat. Taylor Swift)
The Ghost of Cincinnati
Hoping Then
Mimi (feat. Ilsey)
Easy to Sabotage (feat. Naeem)
Hutch (feat. Sharon Van Etten, Lisa Hannigan, and Shara Nova [My Brightest Diamond])
8:22am (feat. La Force)
Magnolia
Juneâs a River (feat. Ben Howard and This Is The Kit)
Brycie
New Auburn (feat. AnaĂŻs Mitchell)
Ever since childhood, learning to play various instruments in a suburban Cincinnati basement alongside his brother Bryce, Aaron Dessner has consistently sought an emotional outlet and deep human connection through music â be it as a primary songwriter in The National, a founder and architect of beloved collaboration-driven music festivals, or collaborator on two critically acclaimed and chart-topping Taylor Swift albums recorded in complete pandemic-era isolation at his Long Pond Studio in upstate New York, among many other projects. Through it all, Dessner has brought together an unlikely community of musicians that share his impulse to connect, celebrate and, most of all, process emotion and experience through music.
This generous spirit and desire to push music forward has never been more deeply felt than on Big Red Machineâs How Long Do You Think Itâs Gonna Last?, the second album from Dessnerâs ever-morphing project with Bon Iverâs Justin Vernon. In 2008, while assembling material for the charity compilation Dark Was the Night, Dessner sent Vernon a song sketch titled âbig red machineâ. Vernon interpreted âbig red machineâ as a beating heart and finished the song accordingly â a metaphor Dessner says âstill sticks with me today. This project goes to many places and is always on some level about experimentation, but it shines a light on why I make music in the first place, which is an emotional need. Itâs one of my therapies and one of the ways I interrogate the past.â
Released in 2018, Big Red Machineâs self-titled debut album evolved from improvisation and what Dessner calls âstructured experimentalism,â with an ear toward building tracks that would work well in a live setting alongside visual elements. When Dessner and Vernon started the Eaux Claires Music Festival in 2015, they staged the original âBig Red Machineâ as an improvisation-based performance piece. They later took that show to the PEOPLE collectiveâs Berlin residency and festival, and to Dessnerâs Haven Festival in Copenhagen. âBig Red Machine started as this thing we would do for fun, and we fell in love with the feeling of it,â says Dessner.â Vernon agrees: âI remember it feeling really easy, but we never knew what would happen. It was exciting. As time went on, we just kept doing things together. And our friendship has grown strong, alongside all the collaborative stuff.â
New Big Red Machine material began taking shape in spring 2019, when Vernon came to visit Dessner at Long Pond. The first week produced songs such as âReese,â â8:22amâ and eventual album opener âLatter Days,â a haunting number sung by Vernon and AnaiÌs Mitchell that set the emotional tenor for what was to come. âIt was clear to her that the early sketch Justin and I made of Latter Days was about childhood, or loss of innocence and nostalgia for a time before youâve grown into adulthood â before youâve hurt people or lost people and made mistakes. AnaiÌs defined the whole record
when she sang that, as these same themes kept appearing again and again,â Dessner says. In the ensuing months, Vernon and Dessner would meet up when they could, and in the meantime, Dessner developed the existing material and wrote new instrumental tracks which he sent Vernon, always eager to hear what he would receive back.
âJustin is incredibly gifted, but heâs also disruptive in the best way,â says Dessner, pointing to the first note of the song âBirchâ as a prime example. âItâs absolutely brilliant, but it was very surprising when I heard it the first time. I canât tell you what that interval is. There are many moments working with him where your head hits the wall in amazement like that.â
In the early stages of the pandemic, Swift approached Dessner to work with her on what would become the sister albums folklore and evermore. Dessner describes this period as a âcreative blur,â during which heâd be writing material for Swift and Big Red Machine simultaneously. âI think this was an intense growing period for me, I was learning so much from Taylor and the process. Along the way, I shared all of our unfinished Big Red Machine songs with her and she really found them inspiring and gave me so much positive feedback and encouragement,â he says. âI think that helped me realize how connected this Big Red Machine music was to everything else I was doing and that I was always supposed to be chasing these ideas. I was finding new sounds and ways of working through these songs. I just hadnât been able to finish them. So, I did.â
Beyond Vernon and Swiftâs encouragement, many of Dessnerâs previous collaborators and friends show up for him here, continuing the reciprocal exchange of ideas that has come to define his creative community. Songs feature guest vocals and writing contributions from artist friends including Fleet Foxesâ Robin Pecknold (âPhoenixâ), Ben Howard and This Is The Kit (âJuneâs a Riverâ), Naeem (âEasy to Sabotageâ), Sharon Van Etten, Lisa Hannigan and My Brightest Diamondâs Shara Nova (âHutch,â a tune inspired by Dessnerâs late friend, Frightened Rabbit frontman Scott Hutchison) and Swift herself (âBirchâ and âRenegade,â the latter an instant-classic Taylor earworm summed up by the poignant lyric âIs it insensitive for me to say / get your shit together so I can love you.â The song was recorded in Los Angeles at the Kitty Committee studio in March 2021, the same week when Swift and Dessner took home the GRAMMY for Album of the Year for folklore.)
âThis is all music I generated, but it is interesting to hear how different people relate to it, or how different voices collide with it,â Dessner says. âThatâs what makes it special. With everyone that's on this record, there's an openness, a creative generosity and an emotional quality that connects it all together.â
As he continued writing prolifically on his own, Dessner noticed a theme emerging -- the idea of sitting with the uncomfortability of personal and family darkness from his childhood and reflecting on how emotional issues he dealt with growing up have reverberated through his adult life. It became clear that some of these heâd need to sing himself; songs such as âThe Ghost of Cincinnatiâ and âMagnoliaâ address the disintegration of marriage and family and mental health, asking pointed questions of himself and those closest to him. âBrycieâ is an ode to his aforementioned twin and National bandmate, who picked up on the musical vibes immediately when Dessner played the song for him for the first time backstage at a National show in Washington D.C.
âHe picked along to it with me and it immediately sounded like Aaron and Bryce playing the guitar in the basement as kids, which was my intent,â Dessner remembers. âThe words mean a lot to me. Itâs about my childhood with Bryce, and how I had pretty severe depression in high school. He was the one who kept me going and took care of me until I was back on my feet. Iâve lost close friends to depression and this song is about how important it was that Bryce was there for me at that time and is still here.â In addition to being one of the more lyrically significant tracks on the album, Dessner says singing it himself felt like an important act of self-acceptance.
âI always sing under my breath when I write music, but I usually hand it off to [National vocalist] Matt [Berninger] or others" he says. âWhen you're in a band for so long and somebody else is that person, you come to rely on it and Iâve always loved Mattâs voice and his words. But singing âBrycieâ myself helped rewire my brain to realize that maybe Big Red Machine is the project that not only enables me to create songs with other people, but also sometimes finish songs on my own.â
Recalling sessions at Sonic Ranch in Texas when Dessner recorded his vocal takes, Vernon says, âAaron showed me âBrycieâ a couple years ago now. I was like, this is beautiful, and you should do more singing. Not only would it be good for the future of your songwriting, but your voice sounds really good to me. It was exciting to see him flourish in that way â to now be a part of that process and realize the hardships in that and also the victories. On this record, heâs leading the charge, wholly and completely.â
Musically, How Long Do You Think Itâs Gonna Last? features what Dessner calls maybe the âclearest distillationâ of his varying songwriting and production styles. Songs like âReese,â the Dessner-sung âMagnoliaâ and the elegiac âHutchâ are built on the kinds of tear-jerking piano melodies millions of fans have come to love from The National, but then move at their own pace toward unusual sonic destinations. âAaronâs greatest gift as a collaborator is his ability to evolve and experiment with the emotional sound that is so natural to him," Vernon says of the material.
Elsewhere, the dream-like âHoping Thenâ sets layered vocals by Vernon, Dessner and Hannigan (âItâs the on the edge of why I canât sleep soundlyâ) atop chopped and phased violin lines, programmed drums and countermelodies played on a rubber bridge guitar. His brother Bryceâs orchestration ebbs and flows throughout this song and many others. The main instrumental track of the chugging, groovy âEasy to Sabotageâ was stitched together from two different live recordings and later enveloped in warm keyboard textures and the head-nodding vocals of Naeem. âIt just feels alive and electric, and it just happened,â Dessner says of the song.
That sense of shared experience extended to the new albumâs title, which was coined by Swift after Dessner told her he wasnât sure what to call the new album. Intuitively summing up the themes, she suggested titling it âHow Long Do You Think Itâs Gonna Last?,â a question which she pointed out could refer to multiple subjects addressed therein: âchildhood, family, marriages, a depression, a losing streak, a winning streak or a creative streak. Taylor saw it all so clearly,â Dessner says. âA year ago, weâd never even worked together. Itâs so cool that this community keeps extending and that everyone who contributed to this album connected so naturally to the emotions at the heart of the music."














