Deserter's Songs: Instrumental is basically for anyone who felt like they couldn't get enough of a good thing. While the original album was remixed, remastered, and otherwise fooled with to fine effect, it appears that this this set -- which mirrors the original song for song -- is literally the same recording sans the voices.
Deserter's Songs was the album on which
Mercury Rev lost its trademark, mischievous, and occasionally anarchic sense of humor, and became more ambitious musically. They focused less on adventurous -- if sometimes unprofessionally performed -- music and more on a traditional symphonic pop framework and
Dave Fridmann's growing studio prowess, which one can hear without the interruption of the human voice, his Theremin and Mellotron,
Suzanne Thorpe's flute,
Jonathan Donahue's chamberlain strings, guest
Rachel Handman's violins, as well as brass, vibraphones, and
Grasshopper's woodwinds.