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Elizabeth and the catapult
Elizabeth and the catapult









On the concept, Ziman said, “It’s about how our feelings about the past inform our actions and choices in the future. She wrote them down in a dream journal with thoughts and memories of childhood, not set in any real time frame, that eventually became the themes that unite the songs on the album. Jessica Huseman is a double CCPA and Political Science Major.Keepsake contains the lyrical ideas that came to singer-songwriter, Elizabeth Ziman, in lucid dreams she experienced. And if you decide that the music is not for you, at least take joy in the band’s absolutely fantastic name. Pick up this album in the store, or buy it on he Internet, and I promise you that you will not be disappointed or bored. If you are sick of the overplayed, over synthesized, and over remixed versions of the same five pop songs that play over and over again on the radio, this is definitely a good antidote. I am positive that had the band signed with a more commercial label, we would not be able to enjoy such a new and different sound. The sounds of Elizabeth and the Catapult caught the attention of a several major labels, but the band eventually decided to sign with the indie “Verve Forecast.” This decision allowed them maximum creative control over the album, which is a good thing for all of us. And while this might seem juvenile, I believe it is the perfect fit for the over-stressed college lifestyle. The childlike quality of most of the songs on this album swing you back to a time of running around without shoes on or racing your friend back to their house after chasing down the ice-cream truck. The name of this band could have easily been the name of Pixar’s new summer movie, and the music could have easily been the background. Because of that calm, this album is tailor-made for a lazy, relaxed day and can easily be listened to while doing homework, talking on the phone, or falling asleep. for the sense of calm the new setting would provide for the album.

elizabeth and the catapult

While the band wrote and practiced their songs in New York City, they chose to record their album in Omaha, Neb. But maybe that shouldn’t be surprising when you consider that the trio met and formed their group at Boston’s Berklee College of Music. The intense instrumentals and creative sounds make it difficult to believe that such songs could be created by less than an entire symphony, much less three people. Ziman grew up in Greenwich Village, just a few steps away from where sixties folkies like Bob Dylan started their careers, and the inspiration of New York City is very obvious when you flip through the tracks.Īfter listening to the album, you might be surprised to find out that this band is only made up of three people. The album is reminiscent of the smooth, upbeat sounds of the ’60s and ’70s without being anchored to any particular decade, and the lyrics are appropriate for any age, place, or date. The album goes from the charming indie pop inspired “Mama’s Boy,” to a downright melancholy cover of Leonard Cohen’s “Everybody Knows” to the almost Broadway-style “Race You.” And while the difference in styles may threaten to make the album disconnected or chaotic, Elizabeth Ziman’s jazzy vocals string all of the songs easily together. It is a concept album that revolves around the notion that we never really grow up we are all just “Taller Children.” And while a lot of concept albums get old and annoying after a while (think Green Day’s American Idiot), the songs on this album vary so much in style and sound that you will have no trouble simply putting the album on repeat.

elizabeth and the catapult

When I went home, I bought the entire album on iTunes.Įlizabeth and the Catapult’s first album, Taller Children, is a definite good buy.

elizabeth and the catapult

The song “Mama’s Boy” was a fresh, upbeat contrast to the normal acoustic indie music the store usually played, and I soon found myself singing along to the jazzy lyrics. I first heard of the band Elizabeth and the Catapult while working at Anthropologie.











Elizabeth and the catapult