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Every deer hunting season, Nilsen received a large amount of fan mail and requests for an album. People frequently requested the song on radio stations and their address was the most requested. The song was in the number one spot on a radio show hosted by Dr. Demento in 1993. [2]
Heilung is an experimental folk music band made up of members from Denmark, Norway, and Germany. [4] Their music is based on texts and runic inscriptions from Germanic peoples of the Iron Age and Viking Age. Heilung describe their music as "amplified history from early medieval northern Europe".
"Second Week of Deer Camp" is a novelty song about a group of men who partake in deer hunting in a camp in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Despite their efforts, they state that they "shoot the bull but never shoot no deer." [3] [2] An uncredited article from the Associated Press described the song as having a "polka beat". [1]
[4] In 2008, Deerhunter released its third studio album, Microcastle, which included a bonus disc titled Weird Era Cont.. In 2009, the EP Rainwater Cassette Exchange was released. Microcastle was the first Deerhunter release to appear on American music charts , earning spots on the Billboard 200 , Billboard ' s Top Independent Albums, and ...
"Hunting High and Low" is a song by Norwegian band a-ha, released in June 1986 as the fifth and final single from the band's debut studio album of the same name (1985). It became the third most successful single from Hunting High and Low on the charts and one of the band's most recognizable and popular songs.
In 2013, Harris released an album, The Man Who Died in His Boat. Grouper's studio album titled Ruins was released on October 31, 2014. The album is relatively stripped-down; piano, voice and field recordings. [11] The majority of the album was recorded in Aljezur, Portugal in 2011, while Harris was on a residency set up by Galeria Zé dos Bois ...
Mike McGonigal of Pitchfork described Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill as "druggy and sexy and arty and pretty, but never pretentious", calling it "an arresting album of pastoral psychedelic pop". [3] Reflecting on Deer for its 10th anniversary, Stereogum ' s Gabriela Tully Claymore credited it with drawing people's attention to Harris' Grouper ...
Deerhunter's first album, Turn It Up Faggot, was "the result of a lot of negativity". [8] After the band finished the album, in an indication of how difficult it was to record in the wake of his bandmate's death, Cox said "I don't ever want to make this album again". [8] The album's liner notes are dedicated to Bosworth.