- Source: The Narcotic Story
- Ryan Gosling
- Obat psikoaktif
- Asam klorida
- California
- Sylvia Earle
- Pintu udara
- Edema paru akibat berenang
- The Narcotic Story
- The Narcotics Story
- Oxbow (band)
- Federal Medical Center, Lexington
- Narcotics Anonymous
- Anti-Heroin Act of 1924
- Harrison Narcotics Tax Act
- 50th Annual Grammy Awards
- An Evil Heat
- Thin Black Duke
The Narcotic Story is the sixth studio album by American experimental rock band Oxbow. It was their first to be released through Hydra Head Records and would be their last full-length album until Thin Black Duke, released a decade later. Co-produced by Joe Chiccarelli, the album incorporates influences from blues rock and features orchestral music, arranged by guitarist Niko Wenner.
Content
Chris Morgan of Treble describes the album as a "a post-modernist blues record. The music is complex and unpredictable at times but the direct emotional rawness of the most acid-tongued bluesmen is intact and very plainly laid bare like a dumped corpse on a dirt road. It’s hushed and thin but can fill the biggest space with claustrophobic dread in no time." The blues influence is also noted by Brain Howe of Pitchfork: "The Narcotic Story fully embraces a sort of slow-burning, infernal blues. It's a malign transmission, sparser than Oxbow's more metallic styles, and, paradoxically, much heavier." The "musical subtleties" of the album were highlighted by a Drowned in Sound critic: "Strings spill, weeping barroom pianos plink dolefully and the noise of Neurosis tuning up in Hell with razor-wire for plectrums is succeeded by a band becoming comfortable in their own skins; cohesive, essential, even accessible."
The lyrics tell the story of a character named Frank Johnson, "a downtrodden gent [...] lurching through the self-degrading shadows of life." Morgan described it as "a record of addiction and withdrawal, [...] it tells a decidedly unglamorous story of narcotics and whatever else Robinson’s characters go through." The album was initially conceived as the first part of a triptych with plans for a filmed adaptation. However, in 2017, the band stated that they had "over-promise[d]" and that the person who had been "filming some of the stuff" (who had also inspired "large portions" of the album) "just disappeared with the film."
Release
The album was released through Hydra Head Records on CD and through Black Diamond on LP the following year.
Reception
The album received highly positive reviews from many publications. Drowned in Sound considered it to be "2007's greatest LP". Scene Point Blank wrote that the album marked "another notch on the bedpost of the cash-burning, international horrorshow that is Oxbow, another chapter in one of modern music's most deranged and cathartic sagas." Aaron Turner (founder of Hydra Head Records and Isis front man) included the album among his "picks" and called it "a lesson in brutality, restraint, beauty and menace of endless suspense doled out in equal but unpredictable measure. While musical artists of all stripes regularly feign emotional energy through the mode of song craft, there are a slim few who have so purely channeled the human experience so tenderly and so forcefully as Oxbow have on The Narcotic Story."
= Awards
=Producer Joe Chiccarelli was nominated for a Grammy Award for Producer of the Year, Non-Classical for his work on The Narcotic Story alongside three other albums in 2008.
= Accolades
=Rock-A-Rolla magazine named it the best album of the year.
Track listing
Personnel
Adapted from Discogs.
Art direction – Aaron Turner
Bass – Dan Adams
Bassoon – Jarratt Rossini
Cello – Eric Gaenslen
Clarinet – Leslie Tagorda
Orchestral composition – Niko Wenner
Conductor – Carlo Dean
Photography direction – Gabriella Marks
Drums, percussion – Greg Davis
Engineering (second engineers) – Enrique Gonzales Muller, Jared Warner
Engineering (second engineer), voice (track 1) – Loredana Crisan
Flute – Diane Grubbe, MaryClare Brzytwa
Guitars, keyboards, arranger, producer, music – Niko Wenner
Mastering – J.J. Golden, John Golden
Oboe – Jessica Boelter
Oboe (oboe solos) – Kyle Bruckmann
Other (locations) – Monte Vallier
Production, mixing – Joe Chiccarelli
Violin – Homer Hsu, Robin Sharp, Sam Smith (track 8)
Vocals, lyrics – Eugene Robinson