VIA PRESS RELEASE | The Mountain Goats announce the reissue of their classic 2000 album, The Coroner’s Gambit. Long out-of-print and sought after by Mountain Goats fans, The Coroner’s Gambit returns to CD, standard LP, and Kandy Korn Hybrid Yellow vinyl—and debuts on cassette—on June 28, 2024, featuring new liner notes written by John Darnielle. In a nod to the original release, a limited number of Peak Vinyl copies, available from the Mountain Goats’ Bandcamp page and the Merge store will be housed in a paper bag featuring the printed liner notes.
The Coroner’s Gambit finds John Darnielle between physical and sonic spaces, five of its sixteen songs recorded in Simon Joyner’s Omaha, Nebraska studio, five more at home in Colo, Iowa, and the rest after he moved to Ames. The mix of home and studio recordings grants The Coroner’s Gambit a thrilling sense of immediacy, its sharply drawn characters and the immaculately appointed lore of the worlds they occupy representing a breakthrough for Darnielle as a practitioner of the full-length album. It is an early masterpiece, an introspective epic that further burnishes Darnielle’s reputation as one of our greatest songwriters, one whose gift for confessional fabulism knows few rivals.
The Mountain Goats are gearing up to tour the UK and Ireland before playing Primavera Sound this May. John Darnielle will perform a solo set during the Merge 35 festival in July, and the band will play a co-headlining show with The New Pornographers in August.
On June 28, 2024, Merge Records reissues the Mountain Goats’ The Coroner’s Gambit on CD, LP, and, for the first time, cassette. Originally released in October 2000, The Coroner’s Gambit finds John Darnielle between physical and sonic spaces, five of its sixteen songs recorded in Simon Joyner’s Omaha, Nebraska, studio, five more at home in Colo, Iowa, and the rest after he moved to Ames.
The album came together slowly; the Mountain Goats had released music every year from 1991 to 1998, but between the release of that year’s “New Asian Cinema” EP and The Coroner’s Gambit, 1999 passed without an official Mountain Goats release. The additional time that went into The Coroner’s Gambit paid off: It is a breakthrough for Darnielle as a songwriter and practitioner of the full-length album. His characters are sharply drawn, the immaculately appointed lore of the worlds they occupy providing them some shelter from the storm. He has grown as a guitarist and in voice, wringing moments of sweetness and humor from songs of fury and lament, nimbly modulating from mourning to longing, passing air through the lungs of the dead and survivors alike.
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The mix of home and studio recordings, songs where Darnielle’s only accompaniment is his guitar and the whirr of his boombox and songs featuring additional instrumentation (banjo, percussion), grants The Coroner’s Gambit a thrilling sense of immediacy while pointing towards a future that is soon to break open with All Hail West Texas and Tallahassee. The Coroner’s Gambit is a masterpiece in its own right, an introspective epic that further burnishes Darnielle’s reputation as one of our greatest songwriters, one whose gift for confessional fabulism knows few rivals.
In the ensuing years since its original release on CD and LP, The Coroner’s Gambit has become somewhat tricky to pin down in its entirety. Releasing the CD for the segment of the Mountain Goats massive who just wanted the songs, and the LP for those drawn to the ephemera of the album as a package, vinyl copies were housed in a paper bag that had additional Darnielle-penned liner notes printed on them. One thousand vinyl copies were issued, and, based on reports from the collector’s scene, far fewer than one thousand bags survive to the present, its text living on largely through Flickr albums and fansites. The 2024 reissue marks the passage of time with new text and liner notes by Darnielle, and, true to the circumstances of the original, a limited number of vinyl copies will be housed in a printed paper bag.