Dilly (song)

"Dilly" is the fourth single taken from Band of Horses' third album Infinite Arms.[1] The song peaked #93 on the Belgian Singles chart.[2]

"Dilly"
Single by Band of Horses
from the album Infinite Arms
B-side"Georgia"
ReleasedFebruary 14, 2011
GenreIndie rock
Length3:31
LabelBrown Records/
Fat Possum/Columbia
Songwriter(s)Ben Bridwell, Tyler Ramsey
Producer(s)Band of Horses, Phil Ek
Band of Horses singles chronology
"Georgia"
(2010)
"Dilly"
(2011)

History

Guitarist Tyler Ramsey came up with the song while staying in a cabin in North Carolina. He originally recorded it while playing the ukulele and a "little tiny keyboard". The demo recording was sent to Ben Bridwell who liked it and added his contribution to the song.[3] There was an unusual tuning between the keyboard and ukulele that allowed Ramsey to come up with the song's melody.

On November 16, 2010, Band of Horses released a video for "Dilly". Previous videos for songs from Infinite Arms had been collections of still photographs by the band's longtime collaborator Christoper Wilson, merged to make movies. The "Dilly" video was filmed in the Mojave Desert by director Philip Andelman and was exclusively premiered on the movie website IMDb. The video features the exploits of a trouble-making motorcycle gang and includes surreal sequences of the gang dancing in formation, as well as them killing people by shooting them with nothing more than a pointed finger. The collaboration with IMDb represented the first occasion that the website has premiered a music video.[4]

Reception

Addict Music criticized the song for being "corny" in comparison to other songs from Infinite Arms.[5] Chron recognized the band's focus on the track's vocal arrangements,[6] while The New York Times recognized the influence of "1970s soft-rock folkies America."[7] The Seattle Post-Intelligencer singled "Dilly" out as the best song from Infinite Arms and correctly predicted that it would be a future single.[8]

Personnel

  • Ben Bridwell - vocals, guitars, drums, sounds, memotron
  • Creighton Barret - drums, thunderdrum, percussion
  • Ryan Monroe - keyboards, vocals, percussion, guitar
  • Bill Reynolds - bass, tambourine, guitar, percussion, sounds
  • Tyler Ramsey - guitar, vocals, percussion, keyboards, piano, theremin
gollark: Or in your case, manually type it out for some stupid reason.
gollark: And *this* is why you should ACTUALLY LEARN THINGS and not just copy-paste code.
gollark: If this computer is plugged into the reactor I can modify this to display actual data.
gollark: ```luawhile true do for i = 1, 5 do print("RF/t:", math.random(0, 100000)) print("Heat:", math.random(0, 100000)) os.sleep(30) end -- do stuff to clear screen hereend```
gollark: Because 2 lines per run.

References

  1. Stickler, John "Band Of Horses Reveal Details Of New Single Dilly" Stereoboard - January 10, 2011
  2. "Discografie Band Of Horses". ultratop.be. Hung Medien. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  3. "Band of Horses on Q TV" on YouTube Q TV - June 17, 2010 (see 6:08)
  4. Barnes, Mike "IMDb.com Steps Into Music Video World" The Hollywood Reporter - November 16, 2010
  5. Slater, Angela "Band Of Horses – Infinite Arms (Columbia)" addictmusic.com - May 10, 2010
  6. Dansby, Andrew "Review: Band of Horses strikes right balance on Infinite Arms" Chron - May 16, 2010
  7. Caramancia, John "Critics Choice - New CDs" The New York Times - May 16, 2010
  8. Doherty, Charlie "Music Review: Band Of Horses - Infinite Arms" The Seattle Post-Intelligencer - April 16, 2011
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.