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Simple Life
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Simple Life
Current price: $22.99
Barnes and Noble
Simple Life
Current price: $22.99
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Sparse even by
Mason Jennings
standards, the self-produced
Simple Life
, dubbed "A Collection of Solo Acoustic Songs," was recorded in his friend
Tom Garneau
's living room directly to two-track tape. It received a limited release by
Jennings
' own Minneapolis-based
Architect Records
, on which he also released the more major
Century Spring
the same year. As the title would suggest, this is a set of simple, acoustic folk songs which seem to find an artist already known for his sincerity at his most personal and spirited. Many songs contain elements of confessional storytelling reminiscent of
Bob Dylan
's
Another Side of Bob Dylan
;
is, after all, first and foremost a fantastic storyteller, here condensing brief narratives into sweet, intimate vignettes which hint that a simple life can often be anything but. Many of the lyrics are even ironically preoccupied with death, from
' resolve to keep living in
"Ain't Gonna Die,"
to the everlasting peace imagined in
"In My Grave."
It also seems to be something of a concept album, loosely chronicling the various stages of the end of a relationship; in
"Isabel,"
he's sad, in
"Isabella Part II,"
he's angry, and in
"12/8 Time,"
he gets revenge ("Now her key don't fit/ I'm not gonna let her in."). The definitive statement on the album, however, is the riveting final track,
"Rebecca DeVille,"
in which he plays equal parts narrator and protagonist. The chorus pleads, "Anybody seen my baby?" while the verses fill in the details of her mysterious murder.
's raw, unpolished feel suits the material well. Executed magnificently in a casual environment, it surely ranks among
' finest work. ~ Ben Peterson
Mason Jennings
standards, the self-produced
Simple Life
, dubbed "A Collection of Solo Acoustic Songs," was recorded in his friend
Tom Garneau
's living room directly to two-track tape. It received a limited release by
Jennings
' own Minneapolis-based
Architect Records
, on which he also released the more major
Century Spring
the same year. As the title would suggest, this is a set of simple, acoustic folk songs which seem to find an artist already known for his sincerity at his most personal and spirited. Many songs contain elements of confessional storytelling reminiscent of
Bob Dylan
's
Another Side of Bob Dylan
;
is, after all, first and foremost a fantastic storyteller, here condensing brief narratives into sweet, intimate vignettes which hint that a simple life can often be anything but. Many of the lyrics are even ironically preoccupied with death, from
' resolve to keep living in
"Ain't Gonna Die,"
to the everlasting peace imagined in
"In My Grave."
It also seems to be something of a concept album, loosely chronicling the various stages of the end of a relationship; in
"Isabel,"
he's sad, in
"Isabella Part II,"
he's angry, and in
"12/8 Time,"
he gets revenge ("Now her key don't fit/ I'm not gonna let her in."). The definitive statement on the album, however, is the riveting final track,
"Rebecca DeVille,"
in which he plays equal parts narrator and protagonist. The chorus pleads, "Anybody seen my baby?" while the verses fill in the details of her mysterious murder.
's raw, unpolished feel suits the material well. Executed magnificently in a casual environment, it surely ranks among
' finest work. ~ Ben Peterson