Portland pop savant Michael George Johnson is Reclinerland. After two albums of jangly indie rock, Reclinerland have returned with a new jazz-oriented sound. Far from a pastiche, Reclinerland v2.0 blends the best elements of indie pop's catchiness with a newfound sophistication.
"Delight yourself, and they will be also."
By this axiom Michael George Johnson, the creative force behind Reclinerland, has delivered a fully realized and astonishingly satisfying album that few could have imagined from listening to his two prior full lengths and one EP. Largely confined to the sphere of pop music, Johnson has commandeered a coup on his own image with The Ideal Home Music Library.
According to the substantial and illuminating (32 page) liner notes, the sheet music being performed here was only recently unearthed after decades of exile in one of America's foremost music institutions. Entrusted to the unlikely but enthusiastic candidate of Johnson, the Cole Porter and Rogers and Hammerstein-inspired songs take on idiosyncratic charm and surprising depth of character in the den of Portland's famous Type Foundry Studios. Johnson sits down at the Piano for the duration and sings the lion's share, but lets fellow music luminaries Colin Meloy (The Decemberists), Adam Selzer (Norfolk and Western), Chad Crouch (Blanket Music), and Morgan Grace sit in at the microphone, infusing the songbook lyrics with cameo alacrity, piquant attitude, and appealing spirit. Buoyed by trumpet melodies and countermelodies, stand up bass, impressionistic drums, vibraphone, and accordion, the arrangements let the melodies shine through with their minimal voicings.
An intimate, robustly interpreted, and endearing interpretation of show tune nostalgia emerges in The Ideal Home Music Library that will appeal to Magnetic Fields' 69 Love Songs fans, delight Broadway theater season ticket holders, charm Pink Martini word-ofmouth revivalists, and soften the most cynical of rock journalist hearts.
The Ideal Home Music Library is the perfect embodiment of HUSH Record's commitment to visionaries. Reclinerland has achieved something quietly monumental with this collection, wherein music and liner notes dovetail to paint a historical world with bemusing old-world peculiarity, bright, abundant detail and deconstructionist modern verve. It is a world so richly invoked, the listener is compelled to sink into it,and delighted, release any question of authenticity as a moot point.