Neko Case looks formidable on the cover of Middle Cyclone, brandishing a sword in one hand while crouching low on a muscle car's hood. It's mostly camp, of course -- the sort of superwoman image Quentin Tarantino might have used for Death Proof's ad campaign -- but it also draws contrast with the songwriter's previous albums, two of which featured moody shots of Case sprawled on the floor, ostensibly knocked out. Middle Cyclone isn't the polar opposite of Blacklisted's downcast Americana; there are still moments of heartbreak on this release, and Case channels the sad cowgirl blues with all the rustic nuance of Patsy Cline. Multiple years in the New Pornographers' employ have considerably brightened her outlook, however, and Middle Cyclone balances its melancholia with some of the most pop-oriented choruses of Case's career. "I'm a man-man-maneater," she asserts during "People Got a Lotta Nerve," a snappy nugget of harmonies and jangled guitar that helps strengthen her Mercury Cougar-riding cover pose. The mammal metaphors continue with "I'm an Animal," where a coed choir supports the melody with a wordless, hooky refrain. Such songs are still rife with earth tones, perhaps preferring the Southern comfort of roots music to the sparkle of Carl Newman's power pop, but their venture into brighter territory is both assured and tuneful.
Of course, Neko Case already explored the animal world with 2006's Fox Confessor Brings the Flood, and Middle Cyclone devotes more time to weather, nature, and the stormy atmospherics of her backup band. There are few voices as hauntingly beautiful as Case's alto, a siren call fashioned from country's might and pop's melody, and she trains those tones over a number of semi-ballads, from the cinematic "Prison Girls" (a country-noir love letter to someone with "long shadows and gunpowder eyes") to the sparse title track. She does a surprise duet with chirping birds during "Polar Nettles" -- a result of the pastoral recording sessions, which took place in a barn -- before offering up a cover of Sparks' "Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth," which very well may be the album's mission statement. There's still room to tackle love from the perspective of different characters -- a man in "Vengeance Is Sleeping," a disbeliever in "The Next Time You Say Forever," a smitten wind vortex in "This Tornado Loves You" -- but nature remains at the forefront of Middle Cyclone, whose 14 songs conclude with a half-hour field recording of chirping crickets and frogs. Moody, cinematic, and engaging throughout, Cyclone is another tour de force from Neko Case, if not as immediately arresting as Fox Confessor. ~ Andrew Leahey, All Music Guide
Middle Cyclone
03/03/2009 | Anti
Videos from Middle Cyclone
All Music Guide Review
Middle Cyclone Track Listing
Middle Cyclone Notes
The new Neko Case album, the fifteen-track collection Middle Cyclone, is Case's first release since 2006's Fox Confessor Brings The Flood, the best-reviewed and best-selling album of her career.
Middle Cyclone was produced by Case with Darryl Neudorf and recorded in Tucson, Brooklyn, Toronto, and Vermont. It features Case backed by her core band - guitarist Paul Rigby, bassist Tom V. Ray, backing vocalist Kelly Hogan, multi-instrumentalist Jon Rauhouse, and drummer Barry Mirochnick - along with numerous guests including M. Ward, Garth Hudson, Sarah Harmer, and members of The New Pornographers, Los Lobos, Calexico, The Sadies, Visqueen, The Lilys, and Giant Sand, among others. In addition to twelve new songs written by Case, Middle Cyclone includes covers of 'Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth' by Sparks, and "Don't Forget Me" by Harry Nilsson.
In 2006, SPIN Magazine called Case "one of pop music's best" voices, and Interview Magazine hailed her album Fox Confessor Brings The Flood as "one of the most original, beguiling, honest records of the year." The album also earned Case Female Artist of the Year honors from the PLUG Independent Music Awards, and a Top 10 placement in the Village Voice's annual Pazz and Jop Critics Poll of the year's best releases. Fox Confessor was Case's first album to debut in the Billboard Top 100, and has sold nearly 200,000 copies in the U.S. alone.
Credits of Middle Cyclone
- Robert Myers
- Photo Courtesy
- Ryan Boyles
- Assistant Engineer
- Lewis Stillwell
- Photo Courtesy
- Peter Moore
- Mastering
- Carl Newman
- Vocals (Background), Choir, Chorus
- John Convertino
- Drums
- Howe Gelb
- Piano, Guitar (Electric)
- Darryl Neudorf
- Mixing
- Neko Case
- Guitar (Electric), Photography, Drawing, Mixing, Vocals, Guitar (8 String), Executive Producer, Artwork, Vocals (Background), Tambourine
- Craig Schumacher
- Overdub Engineer
- Chris Schultz
- Overdub Engineer
- Sarah Harmer
- Vocals
- Nick Luca
- Overdub Engineer
- Kurt Heasley
- Guitar, Choir, Chorus, Vocals (Background)
- Jon Rauhouse
- Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Steel), Hawaiian Guitar, Pedal Steel, Guitar
- Dallas Good
- Guitar (Electric), Fuzz Guitar
- Travis Good
- Guitar (Electric)
- Carolyn Mark
- Vocals (Background)
- Nora O'Connor
- Vocals (Background)
- M. Ward
- Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar
- Rachel Flotard
- Vocals (Background), Choir, Chorus
- Jason Creps
- Photography
- Chris Shreenan-Dyck
- Assistant
- Barry Mirochnick
- Drums
- Paul Rigby
- Organ, Guitar, Piano, Guitar (Electric), Guitar (12 String Acoustic), Guitar (12 String Electric), Arranger, Dulcimer, Guitar (Acoustic)
- Lucy Roche
- Vocals (Background)
- Erin Collins
- Make-Up
- Tara Szczygielski
- Violin
- Steve Berlin
- Organ, MIDI Sax
- Joey Burns
- Bass, Cello, Bowed Bass
- Kelly Hogan
- Vocals (Background)
- Garth Hudson
- Organ, Piano
















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