Wondrous Bughouse
Wondrous Bughouse is the second album by Youth Lagoon, the stage name of American musician Trevor Powers. The album was released on on the independent record label Fat Possum Records. It peaked at No. 76 on the Billboard 200, No. 12 on the Independent Albums chart and No. 26 on the Top Rock Albums chart.
Composition
Wondrous Bughouse, Trevor Powers' sophomore record as Youth Lagoon, finds Powers collaborating alongside distinguished mixer/producer Ben H. Allen for the first time. Writing the music at home and recording demos on a tape recorder, Powers' lyrics explore themes of death, surrealism, human frailty, and the afterlife. Featuring extensive use of synthesizers, noise and ambient elements, and avant-garde piano and guitar effects, the album suggests a growing state of uneasiness and psychological dysphoria. Allen had produced with indie musicians before, previously lending his expertise to lauded records such as experimental pop quartet Animal Collective's influential Merriweather Post Pavilion and art rock quintet Deerhunter's Halcyon Digest. Wondrous Bughouse was recorded in Atlanta, Georgia.The album is the follow-up to Powers' debut for the Fat Possum record label, The Year of Hibernation, which was produced by Powers and his friend Jeremy Park in Park's own Nampa-based home studio Kung Pow! Studio. The final product would don a bedroom pop aesthetic that would "stand out from its lo-fi peers thanks to a sense of wide-eyed adventure."
With Bughouse, Powers' sonic palette would expand to yield "a dense tapestry of swirling overdubs and warped psychedelia," "much grander and more ambitious than its predecessor."
The "brilliantly grandiose" "Mute" is "a strongly psychedelic, deranged rainbow puke of a song," on which Powers' vocals "have never sounded so soaring and confident."
Third track "Attic Doctor" features a "calliope-like melody", recalling "the darker VHS carnvial sound of Ariel Pink."