User talk:DoctorWho42/Bambi

Bambi is a 2015 album by Scottish musician Momus. It was released on September 30, 2013 by independent record label American Patchwork on CD and distributed by Darla Records.

Background
The first installment of MOMUSMCCLYMONT, a collaboration with ex-Orange Juice member David McClymont, was released in the same year. Songs from Bambi as well as from other 2000s albums Bibliotek, Turpsycore, and Glyptothek were recollected in the Cherry Red Records anthology Public Intellectual.

Cover
The cover was designed by James Goggin and the illustration by Barcelona-based illustrator Miju Lee. The cover also features a typeface called "São Paulo Shimbun" based on the masthead typography from a Japanese-language newspaper printed in São Paulo, Brazil. In 2011, Momus discovered a copy of the newspaper at the Center for Overseas Migration and Cultural Interaction in Kobe, Japan and wrote "I want someone to make a typeface based on that masthead so I can use it for a future album cover."

Music
Momus did not use click tracks, MIDI, nor reverb to produce Bambi. Instead, he used a broken guitar, a broken piano, condenser microphone, another cassette player for distortion, and a couple cassette recorders. For percussion, he used an Anglepoise lamp and pencils. For the guitar, he used Kleenex facial tissues to dampen the strings and inserted the microphone beneath to make kalimbalike sounds. For the piano, he prepared sounds in "the Cagean manner."

Themes
The album features songs about Ludwig van Beethoven, Molly Drake, dystopias, evangelism, and Klaus Kinski. In "The Ephebophobe," set in the year 2047, is about a person being punished by having Google physically removed from his brain.

Reception
The Honest Ulsterman's Darran Anderson praised the album saying "Bambi makes me imagine twirling a radio dial through lo-fidelity broadcasts from another world, despite it being very much our own." Rolling Stone's Dave DiMartino reviewed Bambi favorably with "[i]ntricate, subtle stuff, which might have eternal value were it not loaded with catchphrases and tech-lingo that will render it charmingly dated in milliseconds."