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Sax Rohmer 1

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Sax Rohmer #1

| cover =

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = The Mountain Goats

| album = Heretic Pride

| released = February 18, 2008
February 19, 2008

| format =

| recorded =

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = Folk rock, Indie rock

| length =

| label = 4AD

| writer = John Darnielle

| producer = Scott Solter, John Vanderslice

| prev_title =

| prev_year =

| next_title = San Bernardino

| next_year = 2008

| misc =

}}

"'Sax Rohmer #1'" is the first track on the Mountain Goats' 'Heretic Pride' album released in 2008 on 4AD.

The song describes the milieu of prolific English writer Sax Rohmer whose series of novels featured master criminal Dr. Fu Manchu.

Reception



'Allmusic's Steve Leggett called "Sax Rohmer #1" "shuffling." 'Crawdaddy!'s Jessica Gentile called "Sax Rohmer #1" an "anthemic opener [that] lets us know that 'All roads lead towards the same blocked intersection.'" NPRs Afton Woodward called "Sax Rohmer #1" "one of the best songs" from 'Heretic Pride' stating "[Darnielle] lets loose a barrage of dark and sinister imagery that could have been lifted from a Fu Manchu novel, from 'piles of broken bricks, sign posts on the path' to 'hopeless urchins' and 'spies from imperial China.' He lays this narrative over a diligent but unremarkable guitar melody, intentionally (and wisely) letting the story dominate. But then, slipping into a catchy and strangely upbeat chorus, the song becomes less about the dangers of Rohmer's dark world, and more about finding the way home in spite of them."

'Paste's Jesse Jarnow noted the melodrama with lyrics as "I am coming home to you, with my own blood in my mouth ... if its the last thing that I do." and found the song reflective in "phrasing and word choice" of "Half Dead" from the 2006 studio album 'Get Lonely'. 'Pitchfork Media's Zach Baron called "Sax Rohmer #1" (along with "Lovecraft in Brooklyn" and "In the Craters of the Moon") a "seething throwback [...] taut, propulsive, paranoid, furious." 'Sputnikmusic's Ryan Flatley remarked on the "fullness of the sound and words [that] spill out methodically behind a sweet-and-sour story that is almost heart-wrenching."

'Stereogum' said they were "totally stoked with the older-school sound." 'The Village Voice's Mike Powell reviewed "Sax Rohmer #1" noting both the character and composition. "The familiar grind of a character valiantly trying to make it home in a world full of reasons why he won't. Reality is so absurdly stacked against him that my inclination is to laugh, but it's hard to laugh at someone who admits his mouth is full of his own blood. Darnielle's flurry of downstrokeshe has about three different song types, the flurry-of-downstrokes model being the signature and possibly most beloved among themis mimicked by the rattle of snare and the somersault of tom-toms. His urgencyand the song's poignancyis encapsulated by the title's reference to Sax Rohmer, the English pulp novelist: a character blessed with an eye keen enough to catalog the grimness that surrounds him, but also dumb enough to believe he's going to escape it."

References



Category:2008 songs

Category:The Mountain Goats songs

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