Although
the High Llamas are nominally a group, they're pretty much the brainchild of singer and guitarist
Sean O'Hagan.
O'Hagan did some time in the London-by-way-of-Dublin band
Microdisney, in which he was the songwriting partner of
Cathal Coughlan. After
Microdisney split in 1988 (
Coughlan forming
Fatima Mansions),
O'Hagan released a couple of import-only solo albums before forming
the High Llamas.
The Llamas issued their debut,
Gideon Gaye, in 1994 to high praise in the British press; it was released in the States a year later almost as an afterthought, with virtually no fanfare. Comparisons of the
High Llamas/
O'Hagan to
Brian Wilson/
the Beach Boys are unavoidable, and not just from arcane critics. Anyone with a large
Beach Boys collection will detect the uncanny resemblance to 1966-1970
Beach Boys, with the sophisticated melodies, the beautiful harmonies, and the elaborate production, with the emphasis on layered keyboards and orchestration. Echoes of
Pet Sounds,
Smile,
Wild Honey, and
Surf's Up predominate, though
O'Hagan also claims
Burt Bacharach as a major inspiration. The Llamas began to build a bigger and bigger fan base throughout the late '90s (in the US as well as the UK) and O'Hagen's ever-shifting, ever-growing stable of side musicians made sure every album was as beautifully arranged and carefully conceived as the last. Subsequent efforts include 1996's gorgeously sprawling
Hawaii, 1997's warmly clinical
Cold and Bouncy, and 1999's chilly
Snowbug. Buzzle Bee arrived the following year, featuring a more stripped-down sound and guest vocals from
Mary Hansen from
Stereolab. Before her tragic death in late 2002, O'Hagen had Hansen onboard for the Llamas' chamber-pop masterpiece Beet, Maize & Corn. Virtually eliminating the standard 'electric guitar, bass and drums' formula, Beet, Maize & Corn was full of lilting strings, warm horns and gently plucked classical guitars, and proved to be a high achievement for the Llamas with both critics and fans. Four years later, in 2007, O'Hagen and company revisited the sunny sprawl of
Hawaii (as well as
Cold and Bouncy's technical slickness) for the upbeat and lovingly crafted Can Cladders. For 2011's Talahomi Way, the band opted for a warmer, more overtly '60s-inspired sound.
–
Richie Unterberger, Rovi