Landscapes is the second studio
album by the American recording act
Ducktails, released on August 6, 2009 on Olde English Spelling Bee. The album was recorded entirely by
Matt Mondanile, and was the second full-length Ducktails album to be released in 2009.
Artwork
Regarding the album's artwork, Mondanile noted: "[It has] this purple palm tree imagery, kind of two images, it’s kind of just like: each of my record covers I want to be
pop art that goes along with the record. Cartoon to pop. That’s kind of my style. Taking that and seeing what you can do with it to make it weird."[1]
Fact Magazine characterized Landscapes as a series of "soft-focus aural
polaroids," calling it "a breathtakingly pretty album" whose "sense of place is open and plural: it can conjure or complement whatever landscape you will it to, from a verdant forest to a sun-scorched desert; from an overcrowded city to an empty beach."[2] In a positive review for Pitchfork, David Bevan praised Matt Mondanile's layered recording techniques, writing: "Landscapes is rarely anything but engaging. "Wishes" in particular is a slacker standout more harmonically rich, more sweetly and appropriately lonesome than anything else here."[3]
Landscapes is the second studio
album by the American recording act
Ducktails, released on August 6, 2009 on Olde English Spelling Bee. The album was recorded entirely by
Matt Mondanile, and was the second full-length Ducktails album to be released in 2009.
Artwork
Regarding the album's artwork, Mondanile noted: "[It has] this purple palm tree imagery, kind of two images, it’s kind of just like: each of my record covers I want to be
pop art that goes along with the record. Cartoon to pop. That’s kind of my style. Taking that and seeing what you can do with it to make it weird."[1]
Fact Magazine characterized Landscapes as a series of "soft-focus aural
polaroids," calling it "a breathtakingly pretty album" whose "sense of place is open and plural: it can conjure or complement whatever landscape you will it to, from a verdant forest to a sun-scorched desert; from an overcrowded city to an empty beach."[2] In a positive review for Pitchfork, David Bevan praised Matt Mondanile's layered recording techniques, writing: "Landscapes is rarely anything but engaging. "Wishes" in particular is a slacker standout more harmonically rich, more sweetly and appropriately lonesome than anything else here."[3]