Neutral Milk Hotel's In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, 10 years later
Mar 2, 2008 at 9:42 PM Thread Starter Post #1 of 14

bong

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here's an interesting article on Neutral Milk Hotel's classic In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, and the reclusive Jeff Mangum over the last 10 years.

Jeff Mangum, the Salinger of indie rock. - By Taylor Clark - Slate Magazine

The Salinger of Indie Rock
What happened to Jeff Mangum?
By Taylor Clark
Posted Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2008, at 1:45 PM ET

Ten years ago this month, a songwriter from nowhere and his ramshackle band brought out one of the few truly great albums of this generation, a musical curio so gloriously odd that it almost defies explanation. The group called itself Neutral Milk Hotel, and the record, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, is a concept album about Anne Frank in which vocals about lost Siamese twins and semen-stained mountaintops mingle with the sounds of musical saws, fuzzy tape loops, and an amateur psychedelic brass band. It seems like a formula that would blister your eardrums, yet Aeroplane is a gorgeous, much adored work of art. In 2003, the alternative music magazine Magnet dubbed it the best album of the past decade—better than Nirvana, better than Radiohead.

While the record sells better today than ever, you won't see Neutral Milk Hotel onstage anytime soon because, for all intents and purposes, they've vanished into thin air. At the end of Aeroplane's final song, you can hear Jeff Mangum—the band's singer, songwriter, and all-around mastermind—set down his guitar and walk off, and, minus a few months of under-the-radar touring, that's exactly what Mangum did in real life. When the major labels and the glossy magazines and the half-crazed fans came calling, Mangum never responded. There was no breakup announcement, no reason given for the radio silence—he just faded out. After a decade of speculation, sightings, and hoaxes, his story remains a mystery: Why did he decide to disappear? And where has Mangum gone?

Even before his public vanishing act, Mangum was something of an elusive character. Raised in the arts vortex of Ruston, La., he bristled at his hometown's jocks-and-booze ethic and hoped from an early age to unchain his creative spirit. In the early '90s, Mangum and a few friends formed a now-legendary collective called Elephant Six, which grew to encompass dozens of strangely named bands creating eclectic music mostly for their own enjoyment. Yet Mangum himself seldom stayed in one place for long; he constantly hopped from city to city, acoustic guitar in hand. At home in the collective's base of Athens, Ga., or out on his peregrinations, Mangum cut a strange figure: a long-locked, intense-looking man with a gale-strength singing voice who liked to wear garish thrift-store sweaters and embellish the cuffs of his pants with cartoon sketchings.

Because he suffered from night terrors, Mangum often stayed up until dawn working on his songs, sometimes addressing them to the ghosts in a haunted closet. At first, this method produced modest results: His first album, On Avery Island (1996), showed flashes of promise but had its sludgy and spotty patches. One day, Mangum wandered into a bookstore and happened upon a copy of Anne Frank's The Diary of a Young Girl. The book consumed him. After finishing it, he spent a few days crying over Frank's story. As he told a Puncture magazine interviewer before Aeroplane's release, "I would go to bed every night and have dreams about having a time machine and somehow I'd have the ability to move through time and space freely, and save Anne Frank. Do you think that's embarrassing?" The songs and lyrics he started writing about Frank could be so nightmarish in vision that Mangum grew afraid of what was issuing from his brain: verses about "pianos filled with flames" and eating "tomatoes and radio wires." At times, he seems possessed, singing on Aeroplane's title track, "Anna's ghost all around/ Hear her voice as it's rolling and ringing through me."

In the Aeroplane Over the Sea is so expansive in its weirdness that one of its 11 songs is a rollicking bagpipe jam—yet it would be wrong to call it a "cult" record, since that would imply it's some sort of flawed art-school project. Sure, Aeroplane occasionally sounds like a mariachi circus fed through a broken amplifier, but it all weaves together as Mangum guides the proceedings with percussive guitar strumming, singalong melodies, and his booming, emotive voice. The album plays like a document from a parallel-universe version of the 1940s, inlaid with Mangum's haunting lyrics: "And here's where your mother sleeps/ And here is the room where your brothers were born/ Indentions in the sheets/ Where their bodies once moved but don't move anymore." Aeroplane isn't about airtight instrumentation or tricky songwriting—most of the songs have just three or four chords—but about a remarkable range of feeling put into melody. (Mangum recorded his part of the song "Oh Comely" in one scratch take, at the end of which you can hear a stunned band member yell "Holy ****!" in the background.)

When Aeroplane first debuted, sales took a while to warm up. Those who found the record would appear at shows and (to the annoyance of many audience members) collectively drown out Mangum's singing with their own rendition, but this was still indie music's dark, pre-blog era. By the time magazines started paying attention, toward the end of 1998, Mangum already had one foot out the door. Worn down by months of touring, he grew fed up with discussing himself and explaining his lyrics, eventually declining to accept any calls—yet friends say he still fixated on every word written about him. As his bandmates pressed him to capitalize on Neutral Milk Hotel's success, he withdrew more and more. When R.E.M. offered a chance to open for them, he said no. And for the last decade, that's nearly all he's said.

As Aeroplane's legend began to build, Mangum kept himself busy by having a total nervous breakdown. Laura Carter, his then-girlfriend, told the Atlanta alt-weekly Creative Loafing that he spent entire days sitting in his house in a state of near panic, wearing a pair of old slippers and doing absolutely nothing. He became paranoid, hoarding rice for the inevitable post-Y2K apocalypse. Since 1998, Mangum has rejected every interview request save one 2002 conversation with Pitchfork in which he explained his meltdown. "I went through a period, after Aeroplane, when a lot of the basic assumptions I held about reality started crumbling," he said. One of those assumptions was that music would somehow erase his problems. "I guess I had this idea that if we all created our dream we could live happily ever after," he continued. "So when so many of our dreams had come true and yet I still saw that so many of my friends were in a lot of pain … I saw their pain from a different perspective and realized that I can't just sing my way out of all this suffering."

It took Mangum years to rebuild himself after this spiritual crisis—and since part of that crisis was his recognition that music would never save him from his demons, he couldn't very well embark on another record. So he wandered the globe to find spiritual balance, even spending time in a monastery. (Aeroplane's steady sales helped finance the quest; the album still moves a reported 25,000 copies a year.) Occasionally, Mangum flitted ever so briefly into the public eye. He released a disc of field recordings of Bulgarian folk music, then disappeared. Calling himself "Jefferson," he hosted a late-night radio show on New Jersey's WFMU a few times until he was discovered, then vanished once again. Sometimes he'll appear onstage at friends' rock shows for a song, sending the crowd into paroxysms—but when those friends suggest he record his own music, they say he becomes evasive.

Mangum's continued silence has angered some fans, who accuse him of being selfish or "indifferent to his talent," as if musical ability comes with some sort of obligation to society. At least once a year, someone writes a hoax message from Mangum and posts it online—generally throwing in some fanciful verbal junk to bilk fans into believing it's the genius himself wielding the keyboard. Some have announced forthcoming records or tours, while others have revealed the long-hidden sources of Mangum's misanthropy; they've all been debunked. All we really know for sure is this: According to his record label, Mangum now lives in New York City. He recently married filmmaker Astra Taylor. Friends say he still creates art and that he seems "very happy." If he has plans to record more music, he hasn't told anyone.

And if Aeroplane really is Jeff Mangum's final statement to the universe, maybe we should be happy with that—not because of some tired line about going out at your peak (which he likely didn't reach), but because his story is a kind of modern fable. Many fans see his disappearance only in selfish terms: They've been deprived of more great music for no good reason. They can't understand why Mangum would shun success just to shuffle through his days, and, indeed, when musicians abandon this much promise, the culprit is usually drugs or debilitating accidents or people named Yoko. So he must have gone nuts, right? Well, no. After all, what if Mangum is just being honest? What if he poured his life into achieving musical success only to discover that it wasn't going to make him happy, so he elected to make a clean break and move on? We should all be so crazy.

As always, though, hope for Mangum's return still glimmers. Last month brought news that he may play a guy in a lobster suit in a soon-to-be-released conceptual film. But who knows? You can't see inside the suit.
 
Mar 2, 2008 at 9:47 PM Post #2 of 14
Nice article. ITAOTS is one of my all-time favourite albums.


Quote:

Originally Posted by bong /img/forum/go_quote.gif
(Mangum recorded his part of the song "Oh Comely" in one scratch take, at the end of which you can hear a stunned band member yell "Holy ****!" in the background.)


never noticed this. Time to check it out...
edit: oh THAT shout. never noticed it was actually words
tongue.gif
 
Mar 2, 2008 at 10:24 PM Post #3 of 14
I really like "aeroplane" album, deserves legendary status........but getting lost in its shadow is the debut "avery island" album which is nearly as good and is almost never mentioned.
 
Mar 3, 2008 at 9:17 PM Post #4 of 14
Yep, I love it too.

I also rave about The Olivia Tremor Control album ' Music from the unrealised film Dusk at Cubist Castle' another Elephant Six network band.

Syd Barret would have loved it too.

Shine on
 
Mar 3, 2008 at 9:36 PM Post #5 of 14
Great article.

Kinda reminds me of something Michael Stipe said after Kurt Cobain committed suicide: "If Murmur would have sold 26 million copies, I probably would have killed myself, too." It's pretty hard to understand the pressure that comes along with fame, all too often thrust upon young people not even slightly prepared to handle it. I'm glad Magnum made it out alive.

FWIW, I quite like Aeroplane as well, however I borrowed Live at Jittery Joe's from a friend for a while, and ended up listening to that more often. The "witness protection program"-styled quicktime video on it perfect.
 
Mar 3, 2008 at 10:39 PM Post #6 of 14
Great album. On Avery Island is better, I think. "Song about Sex" or something may be his best.
 
Mar 4, 2008 at 1:03 AM Post #10 of 14
I don't often listen to CDs straight through (I generally prefer to shuffle), but I listened to this today after reading the Slate article. It does have some cohesion from track to track, if only through the anguish of the vocals. IMO, this album does deserve its legendary status (along with DarkAngel and Stephen_Ri's pick of Avery Island), but I wonder how much of the "legend" has to do with Mangum's vanishing act.
 
Mar 5, 2008 at 6:18 PM Post #11 of 14
On Avery Island is quite good but i don't thing it is as cohesive in execution and concept than Aeroplane. that said, my fave Neutral Milk Hotel son is "Song Against Sex". such a great song.
 
Mar 5, 2008 at 7:17 PM Post #12 of 14
Quote:

Originally Posted by Aardvarks /img/forum/go_quote.gif
Yep, I love it too.

I also rave about The Olivia Tremor Control album ' Music from the unrealised film Dusk at Cubist Castle' another Elephant Six network band.

Syd Barret would have loved it too.

Shine on



I came in here to say the same thing! Dusk at Cubist Castle is another favorite.

Aeroplane is still (I think) being pressed on vinyl. I found a copy a few years ago and enjoy it much more than the CD. The album seems to fit with the medium better.

I wish Mangum/NMH would record again, but if this is all we get, we're lucky to have it.

Then again, "SMiLE" eventually got finished and I would not be surprised if Mangum wasn't quietly scribbling songs here and there. He might have a change of heart down the road; people change.
 
Apr 2, 2008 at 2:22 AM Post #13 of 14
Quote:

Originally Posted by bong /img/forum/go_quote.gif
On Avery Island is quite good but i don't thing it is as cohesive in execution and concept than Aeroplane.


Well, that cohesive "concept album" approach is what makes "In an Aeroplane" a masterpiece (and yes, I will call it a masterpiece). A lot of people have written single hits, a lot of movies have "great scenes," millions of paintings are "good paintings." But if you can create a work that comes together in in toto, that's when you have made a masterpiece. I knew nothing about the band, it's history or "Mangum's vanishing act" (it hadn't happened when the album came out, obviously) and I was just spellbound when I completed the album. I knew I had heard a work of art. It's the was same feeling as when I saw "The Seventh Seal" for the first time, or had seen my first Wooster Group production. Absolutely emotionally exhilarated. "In the Aeroplane over the Sea" in one of the very, very few albums that has ever done that to me. I try to stay away from listening to it now, only reserving it for the right mood and when I have 42 minutes to completely devote my attention to it -- and to listen to it in toto.. Thank you Mr. Mangum for turning your soul inside out and putting it down for us to hear. I got it in all it's beauty and madness. Sorry to hear about his breakdown. I had no idea I was listening to such genuine pain.
 

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