The Langley Schools Music Project

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Innocence & Despair
File:The Langley Schools Music Project Innocence & Despair -cover.jpg
Live album by The Langley Schools Music Project
Released rereleased in 2001
Recorded 1976-77
Venue School gymnasium in Langley, British Columbia
Genre Outsider music
Length 1:03:47
Label Bar/None Records Manimal Vinyl (2016 re-issue)

The Langley Schools Music Project is a collection of recordings of children's choruses singing pop hits by the likes of The Beach Boys, Paul McCartney, and David Bowie. Originally recorded in 1976–77, they were found and rereleased only 25 years later (in 2001) and became a cult hit and a successful example of outsider music.

History

The project was undertaken in 1976–77 by Canadian music teacher Hans Fenger with students from four different elementary schools of the Langley School District in British Columbia. Recordings were made in a school gym in Langley, in Metro Vancouver. Two LPs were released, 1976's Lochiel, Glenwood, and South Carvolth Schools and 1977's Hans Fenger/Wix-Brown Elementary School.

Fenger later said:[1]

I knew virtually nothing about conventional music education, and didn't know how to teach singing. Above all, I knew nothing of what children's music was supposed to be. But the kids had a grasp of what they liked: emotion, drama, and making music as a group. Whether the results were good, bad, in tune or out was no big deal -- they had élan. This was not the way music was traditionally taught. But then I never liked conventional 'children's music,' which is condescending and ignores the reality of children's lives, which can be dark and scary. These children hated 'cute.' They cherished songs that evoked loneliness and sadness

The recordings were little known until Brian Linds, a Victoria record collector, found the first record in a thrift store in 2000. He sent it to Irwin Chusid, a proponent of outsider music. After ten labels had rejected them, Bar/None Records released Innocence & Despair, a single-CD compilation of the two LPs.

Response

Innocence & Despair quickly created an international buzz, making many end-of-the-year best album lists in 2001.

Fred Schneider called the project "a haunting, evocative wall-of-sound experience that is affecting in an incredibly visceral way".[2] Neil Gaiman commented, "I wish every school taught music like this. I wish every piece of music recorded in a school gymnasium were this haunting... and then I suspect that, if I listened to them right, maybe they would be."

Richard Carpenter described the vocals on "Calling Occupants" as "charming".[citation needed] David Bowie said the version of "Space Oddity" was "a piece of art that I couldn't have conceived of", describing the vocals as "earnest if lugubrious" and the backing arrangement as "astounding".

Salon music critic Steven Hyden wrote: "[T]he gloomy title [Innocence and Despair] is no lie: The echoing, yelping renditions of this feel-good music gives off a powerfully aching melancholy. It’s the sound of youth, frozen on tape, as it fades inexorably away."[3]

Influence

VH-1 coordinated a reunion of Fenger and dozens of his former students in 2002, and produced a documentary about the project. Screenwriter Mike White's concept for the 2003 hit film School of Rock was inspired by the Langley CD.[4] When Spike Jonze approached Karen O to write the soundtrack to Where The Wild Things Are, he gave Innocence and Despair as an example of the desired "simple melodies that were emotionally complex—something that both kids and adults would appreciate".[5]

In 2010, the Langley School recording of "Good Vibrations" was licensed for the soundtrack of the film Catfish. It can also be heard in the film's trailer.

Track listing

See also

References

  1. Liner notes, Innocence and Despair
  2. http://www.keyofz.com/langley/
  3. Hyden, Steven, "Stop Mocking Children's Choirs," Salon.com, August 1, 2012
  4. High Fidelity: Jack Black stays true to his 'School,' Jim DeRogatis, 28 September 2003
  5. An Interview With Karen O of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Charles McNair, 15 September 2009, Paste

External links