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VII (Blitzen Trapper album)

VII
Blitzen Trapper VII.jpg
Studio album by Blitzen Trapper
Released September 30, 2013
Genre Alternative country, country rap
Label Vagrant Records (US), Lojinx (Europe)
Blitzen Trapper chronology
American Goldwing
(2011)American Goldwing2011
VII
(2013)
All Across This Land
(2015)All Across This Land2015

VII is the seventh studio album by American alternative country band Blitzen Trapper. Described on the band's official site as "somewhat experimental ... a futuristic hip-hop/country-rock hybrid", and by lead singer and songwriter Eric Earley as "hillbilly gangster",VII was the first record Blitzen Trapper released with their new labels, Vagrant (US) and Lojinx (UK). The song "Thirsty Man" was released as the album's only single, hitting #29 on the Adult Alternative Songs Billboard chart.

VII took many writing and stylistic departures from its predecessor, 2011's country-rock American Goldwing. Songwriter Eric Earley explains, "I get bored. I like to move things in a new direction ... I’m always writing, and if you’re always writing things are going to change. You’re going to try things out. And that’s going to make its way into the music.” Earley cites his influences on the album as diverse as John Cale, Townes Van Zant, the Wu-Tang Clan and Waylon Jennings. "Townes probably is the biggest influence on the lyrics. His lyrics can be pretty strange. You don’t know what he’s talking about sometimes. I like that," Earley stated. "It's just me wanting to mix that dark, gangster vibe with the kind of music I grew up listening to and see if it can kind of make sense ... It seems to work. It's a good vehicle for telling stories, too."

VII was well received by critics. An enthusiastic review by Paste magazine calls the record "Blitzen Trapper’s strongest album to date, with years of musical experimentation having come together in the band’s own mad-scientist brand of cosmic Americana ... With each record, Earley’s writing grows more vivid, closer to the short-story-in-a-song realm of the Drive-By Truckers, Vic Chesnutt and Jason Molina at his most direct ... Musically, Blitzen Trapper is less idiosyncratic but no less unique."

Pitchfork referred to the album as "something like a return to form," stating that,"Blitzen Trapper are finding their way back, as it turns out to somewhere between Nation and Furr. The harmonica bleats, walking bass line, and vivid imagery are familiar, but it’s still good to hear the band fire up their Stevie Wonder stomp again."AllMusic praised the album for "[adding] elements of countrypolitan and suburban hip-hop into the pot, seasoning [Blitzen Trapper's] already heady brew with a little North Mississippi Allstars and Odelay-era Beck, especially on cuts like 'Feel the Chill' and 'Ever Loved Once,' resulting in a sort of cosmic, high-def honky tonk that for the most part proves tasty, injecting some much needed brevity into windy frontman Eric Earley's colorful yet often perfunctory tales of sin and redemption."


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