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Rejoicing in the Hands
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Rejoicing in the Hands
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
Rejoicing in the Hands
Current price: $15.99
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When
's
label issued
's glorious home-recorded debut,
, on an unsuspecting world, its gorgeous yet sparse primitivism, complete outsider lyric sensibilities, and infectious melodies grabbed hold of listeners all over the world. It offered them a bona fide fissure between popular and underground American culture.
's aesthetic is no pose; his iconoclastic songwriting could not be farther away from officially sanctioned "alternative" music. However, given the unanticipated coverage and success of the album (by modest
standards, folks, not those dictated by the biz), a quandary was presented in how to follow it up. Should his new songs -- and there were many -- be recorded in exactly the same way to preserve the notion of "authenticity?" Or should he not be penalized by having to adhere to the same economic realities, and be nurtured as the developing artist he is? Wisely,
and
saw through the smokescreen what a word like "authentic" implies.
's songs are the authentic outsider article even if he were to record them in
's studio, so why punish for the sake of a media construct?
chose a simple but very effective recording studio in engineer
' house on the Georgia/Alabama border as their location, getting down 57 songs(!) and choosing 32 for two different albums from the treasure trove.
is the first of these albums -- another will be issued in the fall of 2004. Simply stated, it is a stunner, form start to finish.
's Muse may be furiously active, but she is tender all the same. The sonic ambience on this disc is breathtaking.
brought the master tapes back to Brooklyn for some minimal and tasteful overdubbing -- a guitar track here, a cello or trumpet there, a piano ghosting through the mix in another place, some spare drumming, hand percussion or vibes somewhere else. Over it all, though, is
's reedy tenor and edgy, angular guitar playing with its hypnotic insistence carrying the tunes from deep in the interior of his image and sound world to the fore, where listeners can encounter and engage with them. Elements of
,
, Appalachian rural styles,
music, European and
songs: all weave in and out of one another in a seamless yet crackling whole, each of them serving their role in articulating
's sublimely prismatic, loopy vision. Singling out tracks or quoting from his words would amount to nothing more than sacrilege. This music is simply rendered, to be sure, but unspeakably profound and mercurial; it's funny, warm, heartbreaking, and evocative of another place and time. There are glimpses here of
' "old weird America," the all-but-visible inner terrain that informed certain spiritual, social, and aesthetic elements in our culture.
's music is utterly unselfconscious and poetic.
is a whole -- each song an inseparable part of an offering for listeners to be, quite literally, enchanted and even awed by. ~ Thom Jurek