The Story
âWhen youâve been a band for 17 years, inevitably there are habits you fall into,â says Colin Meloy. âSo our ambition this time was really just to get out of our comfort zone. Thatâs what prompted working with a different producer and using a different studio. We wanted to free ourselves from old patterns and give ourselves permission to try something different.â
With Iâll Be Your Girl, the Decemberistsâlead vocalist and guitarist Meloy, guitarist Chris Funk, keyboardist Jenny Conlee, bassist Nate Query, and drummerJohn Moenâexplore new approaches to making music and broaden their sonic range. Itâs the groupâs follow-up to 2015âs What a Terrible World, What a Beautiful World, though in the time since, they have released the EPFlorasongs; a 10th anniversary limited edition vinyl box set of their 2006 Capitol Records debut The Crane Wife; their own crowd-funded board game Illimat; The Queen of Hearts, a GRAMMY-nominated collaboration with Olivia Chaney under the name Offa Rex; and âBen Franklinâs Song,â the first of Lin-Manuel Mirandaâs monthly âHamildropsâ of bonus material from Hamilton; as well as launching Travelersâ Rest, an annual two-day musical festival of their own curation in Missoula, Montana.
As busy as they have been, the band felt a need to shake things up. âOn the last record,â says Meloy, âthere were moments when I thought I was making familiar choices. I tried to be mindful in the songwriting process of challenging myself and being a little more critical. The idea was, how can we make unfamiliar choices, turn off the light a little and grope around in the dark a bit?â
Previous Decemberistsâ records like The Hazards of Love or The Crane Wife have been structured around thematic or musical concepts, though Meloy maintains that ultimately, itâs always âour frame of mind that ties them together.â This time, he says, the songs share a mood thatâs steeped in our current times and conditionââexuberant nihilism, an apocalyptic dance party was what we envisioned.â
âWe were talking about music and our references,â says Meloy. âIt kept coming back to Roxy Music and early glam, and we dove in with that in mind. The Decemberists are a record-collectorsâ band, weâre all fans and scholars of music, so there a lot of touch points that we all get, but they donât always come through. So we were trying to embrace that Bryan Ferry aspect, that kind of set the tone.â
The approach the Decemberists pursued on Iâll Be Your Girl also allowed for a new sense of contribution and involvement from the other band members. âSince we were going to mix it up, everybody felt like they had more of a voice,â says Meloy. Highlighting the input of Chris Funk and Jenny Conlee, Meloy mentions âSeveredâ as a significant team effort. âThat was written as a punk song, but wasnât really working,â he says. âJenny set this arpeggio throughout it, and it became like an early New Order song. And I had forgotten that when we made the demo, I also started a file to turn it into more of a Depeche Mode songâI actually wanted it to be a synth song all along.â
Iâll Be Your Girl is the sound of a veteran band finding new inspiration, a unit unafraid of challenging itself to re-connect with its creativity. âMaking music is an infinite choose-your-own-adventure,â says Meloy (who is also, of course, the author of a series of best-selling childrenâs books), âand when you go down one path, the other paths get sealed off. So every time we could, we said, âIf this is what our impulses would tell us to do, letâs try to imagine it in a different way.ââ
Description
âWhen youâve been a band for 17 years, inevitably there are habits you fall into,â says Colin Meloy. âSo our ambition this time was really just to get out of our comfort zone. Thatâs what prompted working with a different producer and using a different studio. We wanted to free ourselves from old patterns and give ourselves permission to try something different.â
With Iâll Be Your Girl, the Decemberistsâlead vocalist and guitarist Meloy, guitarist Chris Funk, keyboardist Jenny Conlee, bassist Nate Query, and drummerJohn Moenâexplore new approaches to making music and broaden their sonic range. Itâs the groupâs follow-up to 2015âs What a Terrible World, What a Beautiful World, though in the time since, they have released the EPFlorasongs; a 10th anniversary limited edition vinyl box set of their 2006 Capitol Records debut The Crane Wife; their own crowd-funded board game Illimat; The Queen of Hearts, a GRAMMY-nominated collaboration with Olivia Chaney under the name Offa Rex; and âBen Franklinâs Song,â the first of Lin-Manuel Mirandaâs monthly âHamildropsâ of bonus material from Hamilton; as well as launching Travelersâ Rest, an annual two-day musical festival of their own curation in Missoula, Montana.
As busy as they have been, the band felt a need to shake things up. âOn the last record,â says Meloy, âthere were moments when I thought I was making familiar choices. I tried to be mindful in the songwriting process of challenging myself and being a little more critical. The idea was, how can we make unfamiliar choices, turn off the light a little and grope around in the dark a bit?â
Previous Decemberistsâ records like The Hazards of Love or The Crane Wife have been structured around thematic or musical concepts, though Meloy maintains that ultimately, itâs always âour frame of mind that ties them together.â This time, he says, the songs share a mood thatâs steeped in our current times and conditionââexuberant nihilism, an apocalyptic dance party was what we envisioned.â
âWe were talking about music and our references,â says Meloy. âIt kept coming back to Roxy Music and early glam, and we dove in with that in mind. The Decemberists are a record-collectorsâ band, weâre all fans and scholars of music, so there a lot of touch points that we all get, but they donât always come through. So we were trying to embrace that Bryan Ferry aspect, that kind of set the tone.â
The approach the Decemberists pursued on Iâll Be Your Girl also allowed for a new sense of contribution and involvement from the other band members. âSince we were going to mix it up, everybody felt like they had more of a voice,â says Meloy. Highlighting the input of Chris Funk and Jenny Conlee, Meloy mentions âSeveredâ as a significant team effort. âThat was written as a punk song, but wasnât really working,â he says. âJenny set this arpeggio throughout it, and it became like an early New Order song. And I had forgotten that when we made the demo, I also started a file to turn it into more of a Depeche Mode songâI actually wanted it to be a synth song all along.â
Iâll Be Your Girl is the sound of a veteran band finding new inspiration, a unit unafraid of challenging itself to re-connect with its creativity. âMaking music is an infinite choose-your-own-adventure,â says Meloy (who is also, of course, the author of a series of best-selling childrenâs books), âand when you go down one path, the other paths get sealed off. So every time we could, we said, âIf this is what our impulses would tell us to do, letâs try to imagine it in a different way.ââ












