Music Review - Uk Music Review Home
Welcome to the Music Review - Uk Music Review Home
Album review
COUNTDOWN TO GLASTONBURY 2005
Bright Eyes play the John Peel Stage on Sunday June 26th
BRIGHT EYES - I'M AWAKE, IT'S MORNING
" it's DIGITAL ASH IN A DIGITAL URN that will
be the one you keep coming back to, uncovering new sounds and ideas
on each and every listen ensuring a certain freshness and inventiveness
shines through."
| Review
Control |
|
|
|
Bright Eyes,
the brainchild of Conor Oberst a precociously talented singer-songwriter
who's evolved from his lo-fi home taped roots to unlikely
arena rock troubadour via a string of quietly impressive records,
intense live shows and a rabid fanbase, here releases his
highest profile project to date with two albums that see him
undergoing something of a Beck like re-emergence on one hand
and a fragile country maturity on the other.
Whether you consider it a question of record company greed
or genuine artistic integrity, the release of two albums by
the same artist on the same day represents something of overindulgence.
Arguably different enough records to justify being released
separately, but since when was the idea of a double album
so alien? Split between a more organic acoustic affair, I'M
WIDE AWAKE IT'S MORNING, and the experimental electronic,
DIGITAL ASH IN A DIGITAL URN, these are nevertheless
albums that don't disappoint.
The acoustic based, I'M WIDE AWAKE IT'S MORNING,
is arguably the strongest work containing a level of songwriting
that belies Conor Oberst's tender years. In fact, when Emmylou
Harris agrees to come aboard and sing backing vocals on your
songs then you know you're onto something really special,
something that happens more than once here. WE ARE
NOWHERE AND IT'S NOW represents the first seeds of
this collaboration, and a sublime and graceful moment it is
too. This is the kind of song that leaves you scanning the
liner notes expecting it to have been written in the heyday
of the 70s by someone like Gram Parsons or Bob Dylan, this
is quite simply classic songwriting to send a shiver down
your spine and leave the hairs on the back of your neck standing
to attention. Conor Oberst, still sings in a nervous schoolboy
voice that verges on the edge of emotional breakdown at any
moment but its a style he's honed to perfection by now - sounding
at ease with his burgeoning fame and less schizophrenic and
damaged than on previous records.
OLD SOUL SONG (FOR THE NEW WORLD ORDER),
though reclaims some of that old damage - with his voice rising
to a petulant holler as the guitars crescendo and an organ
follows suit. The tenderness of LUA has Conor playing alone,
just vocals and guitar carrying a song so fragile and touching
that you want to give him a great big hug. The folk inflected
FIRST DAY OF MY LIFE, features a sprightly
fingerpicked acoustic guitar that sounds as its been highjacked
from Nick Drake or Ralph McTell, while ANOTHER TRAVELIN'
SONG is straight up country rock that wouldn't sound
out of place being performed by Johnny Cash or Willie Nelson.
Both an emotional and sonic highpoint, LANDLOCKED
BLUES, builds from gentle country soul to a tense
protest song, starting as a tender duet between Conor and
Emmylou Harris, there's a growing friction in the vocals and
lyrics that finds lines like "but greed is a bottomless
pit/and our freedom is a joke/we're taking the piss"
being spat out with barely contained anger at current US policies.
A return to his more ragged work, ROAD TO JOY,
finds Conor rising his voice to an excitable holler and spitting
out a line like "i could have been a famous singer/if
i had someone else's voice/but failure's always sounded better/let's
fuck it up boys/make some noise" and unleashing torrents
of dissonant free-jazz trumpets and violent drum hits.
Delving into a more experimental oeuvre, DIGITAL ASH
IN A DIGITAL URN, finds Bright Eyes plugging in the
guitars and pouring on the electronic ambience.
As if to show he means business, TIME CODE,
opens proceedings with a gentle soundwash that wouldn't be
out of place of a Boards Of Canada record.
Gradually dropping in the odd burst of vocals and heavily
programmed beats, this is at the very least proof that Conor
is definitely eclectic. If all that seemed just a tad too
desperate to prove a point though, GOLD MINE GUTTED,
restores your faith that the Bright Eyes you know and love
haven't completely left the building. Combining his undoubtedly
well crafted songwriting to the more left-field edge with
much more impressive results.
ARC OF TIME (TIME CODE) a fragile nursery
rhyme strapped to 808 beats invokes a jet lagged Beck fronting
Radiohead, while DOWN IN A RABBIT HOLE, sees Yeah Yeah Yeahs'
guitarist Nick Zinner lending his skills to proceedings with
impressive post-rock effects.
Touching on everything from robotic indie-rock, TAKE
IT EASY (LOVE NOTHING), to post-rock folk, HIT
THE SWITCH and jaunty pop, I BELIEVE IN SYMMETRY,
this is the album that proves the more varied and interesting
listen. While I'M WIDE AWAKE IT'S MORNING
may prove to be the one to cross Bright Eyes over into mainstream
acceptance with its classic arrangements and heartbroken fragility,
it's DIGITAL ASH IN A DIGITAL URN that will
be the one you keep coming back to, uncovering new sounds
and ideas on each and every listen ensuring a certain freshness
and inventiveness shines through.
Make no mistake, the advent of these albums represents the
emergence of Bright Eyes as a formidable presence on the world
stage. Already enjoying massive success back home with number
one singles under his belt, the songs here are enough to ensure
Conor Oberst a fresh new legion of fans to join his already
swelling army of admirers. Yes, this should probably have
been a double album in the first place, but the price of an
extra record is a small price to pay for something so sublime
and precious. Buy I'M WIDE AWAKE IT'S MORNING
for pure songwriting classicism, buy DIGITAL ASH IN
A DIGITAL URN for post-rock folk genius, buy both
and do yourself a huge favour.
In the past few years since the release of Bright Eyes' forth
full length album, Lifted Or The Story Is In The Soil, Keep
Your Ear To The Ground, the Bright Eyes tale has taken many
unexpected twists and turns. Conor Oberst and his ever changing
line up of musical comrades appeared on The Late Show With
David Letterman, The Late Late Show With Craig Kilborne and
were a prominent addition to the MTV2 televised 2003 Shortlist
Awards. In October of 2004 he was invited to join Bruce Springsteen
and REM on an arena tour of swing states in advance of the
presidential election. His performance at those shows sealed
his reputation as a creative force, able to command the attention
of thousands of rock fans with, at times, just his voice and
an acoustic guitar.
Over the past two years the young musician has found himself
hurled from his indie rock enclave onto the world's stage.
While reaching new heights of commercial success, he was hailed
by fans as the finest songwriter of his generation. But he
remained, and remains, an artist unwilling to leave his hometown
label for any major label's promises.
All the while, critical acclaim has spread far and wide with
Bright Eyes selling out several hugely lauded tours and finding
an ever swelling and ravenous audience throughout the world.
Since Lifted, Oberst has released an almost constant stream
of new material for collaborative EPs, tribute albums and
charity records. He ventured into the studio with Nebraska
folk-pop outfit Tilly And The Wall, co-producing their debut
album Wild Like Children and then releasing it on his newly
established record label, Team Love. And yet, despite all
of this recording and performing, it is his songwriting that
has taken unmitigated precedence.
Conor's new songs are undeniably his finest to date. These
new compositions have been rolled into two separate, cohesive
records, I'm Awake It's Morning and Digital Ash In A Digital
Urn, which will be simultaneously released on January 24th.
While a plethora of this new material was born from an early
relocation to Manhattan, 2004 saw Conor's return to Presto!
Studios in Lincoln to record with long-time collaborator and
producer Mike Mogis.
Recording since the age of 13 and tagged rock's boy genius
by the music press for the past few years, these two new albums
provide unequivocal proof that the now 24 year old Oberst
belongs to the lineage of great American songwriters. These
albums are a soundly articulated slice of modern American
life rolled into two very different records. The new songs
are bursting with all the heartfelt poetry for which Bright
Eyes records have earned their acclaim. The rough edges are
still there - the splintering of a note held too long, the
crack of the voice as it reaches slightly too far, the inadvertent
thump of a thumb against a fret - but there is a glorious
new level of depth and texture to the writing and delivery.
Recorded back-to-back and scheduled to be released simultaneously,
more out of necessity than any great art plan, the two albums
work in tandem to elucidate both sides of Conor's recent creative
output.
The first (as in, the first to be laid down on tape) is titled
I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning; a country tinged melange of
Conor's finest acoustic songs, featuring guest vocal appearances
from Emmylou Harris and Jim James (My Morning Jacket).
The second album Oberst recorded, Digital Ash In A Digital
Urn, is a more produced, band-centric album featuring cameo
appearances by Nick Zinner of Yeah Yeah Yeahs.
As has become expected of Bright Eyes recordings, the albums
feature an array of talented comrades: Jesse Harris, Jason
Boesel of Rilo Kiley, multi instrumentalist and producer Mike
Mogis, Nick White of Tilly And The Wall, Matt Maginn of Cursive,
Clay Leverett and Andy LeMaster of Now It's Overhead, former
The Good Life member Jiha Lee, Maria Taylor of Azure Ray,
Clark Beachle of The Faint, Alex McMannus of The Bruces, Jake
Bellows of Neva Dinova and Jimmy Tamborello of The Postal
Service.
www.thestoryinthesoil.com
::
Line Up :: Discography :: Merchandise :: Further Listening
:: Web Links ::
|
LETTING OFF THE HAPPINESS (Saddle Creek) If Winter Ends Padraic My Prince Contrast And Compare The City Has Sex The Difference In The Shades Touch June On The West Coast Pull My Hair Empty Canyon/Empty Canteen A Poetic Retelling Of An Unfortunate Seduction Tereza And Tomas FEVERS AND MIRRORS (Saddle Creek) LIFTED or THE STORY IS IN THE SOIL, KEEP YOUR EAR TO THE
GROUND (Saddle A CHRISTMAS ALBUM (Internet Only) ONE JUG OF WINE, TWO VESSELS (Saddle Creek) Tripped Black Comedy Poison I'll Be Your Friend Get Back Spring Cleaning I'M AWAKE, IT'S MORNING (2005>Saddle Creek Europe) At The Bottom Of Everything We Are Nowhere And It's Now Old Soul Song (For The New World Order) Lua Train Under Water First Day Of My Life Another Travellin' Song Land Locked Blues Poison Oak Road To Joy DIGITAL ASH IN A DIGITAL URN (2005>Saddle Creek) Time Code Gold Mine Gutted Arc Of Time (Time Code) Down In A Rabbit Hole Take It Easy (Love Nothing) Hit The Switch I Believe In Symmetry Devil In The Details Ship In A Bottle Light Pollution Theme To Pinata Easy/Lucky/Free
Other Bright Eyes reviews:
|