Eskimo (album)
| Eskimo | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | September 26, 1979 | |||
| Recorded | April 1976 – May 1979 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 39:01 | |||
| Label | Ralph | |||
| Producer | The Residents | |||
| The Residents chronology | ||||
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Eskimo is the sixth studio album by American art rock group the Residents. The album was originally supposed to follow 1977's Fingerprince; however, due to many delays and arguments with management, it was not released until 1979.
The pieces on Eskimo feature home-made instruments and chanting against backdrops of wind-like synthesizer noise and miscellaneous sound effects. The work is programmatic, each piece pairing music with text detailing a corresponding pseudo-ethnographic narrative. While Eskimo is officially maintained to be a true historical document of life in the Arctic, the stories are deliberately absurd fictions only loosely based in actual Inuit culture, and the chanting is a combination of gibberish and commercial slogans. The album satirizes ignorance toward and mistreatment of the indigenous peoples of the Americas.