The Crane Wife

Label
Capitol USA (new release)
Release date
3 Oct 2006
Running length
11 tracks
Running time
64:26

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Tracklist

    Track     Duration Listeners
1 The Crane Wife 3 4:18 272,719
2 The Island 12:23 96,024
3 Yankee Bayonet (I Will Be Home Then) 4:19 215,176
4 O Valencia! 3:45 263,202
5 The Perfect Crime #2 5:33 158,079
6 When the War Came 5:05 173,555
7 Shankill Butchers 4:39 171,414
8 Summersong 3:28 219,591
9 The Crane Wife 1 & 2 11:21 163,878
10 Sons & Daughters 5:13 178,923
11 Culling Of The Fold 4:22 26,681

About this album

The Crane Wife is an album by The Decemberists, released in 2006. It was produced by Tucker Martine and Chris Walla, and is the band’s first album on the Capitol Records label. The album was inspired by a Japanese folk tale, and centers on two song cycles, The Crane Wife and The Island, the latter of which was inspired by William Shakespeare’s The Tempest. National Public Radio listeners voted The Crane Wife the best album of 2006.[1]

The album cover was made by Portland artist Carson Ellis, long-time girlfriend (and now wife) of Colin Meloy, who has created artwork for each of their albums.

The Crane Wife is an old Japanese tale. While there are many variations of the tale, a common version is that a poor man finds an injured crane on his doorstep (or outside with an arrow in it), takes it in and nurses it back to health. After he releases the crane, a woman appears at his doorstep with whom he falls in love and marries. Because they need money, his wife offers to weave wondrous clothes out of silk that they can sell at the market, but only if he agrees never to watch her making them. They begin to sell them and live a comfortable life, but he soon makes her weave them more and more. Oblivious to his wife’s diminishing health, his greed increases. He eventually peeks in to see what she is doing to make the silk she weaves so desirable. He is shocked to discover that at the loom is a crane plucking feathers from her own body and weaving them into the loom. The crane, seeing him, flies away and never returns.
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