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Maraqopa
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Maraqopa in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $15.99


Maraqopa in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $15.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
Seattle singer/songwriter
Damien Jurado
is one of the better examples of the somewhat invisible but very real trend of gentle folk musicians who started out in hardcore bands. Along with
Mark Thousands
(whose work in
Youth of Today
gave way to a hushed solo career),
Dan Littleton
(
the Hated
to
Ida
), and even
Ian MacKaye
Minor Threat
and
Fugazi
eventually mellowing into
the Evens
),
Jurado
's punk past was held in stark contrast to the spare folk dirges that marked the beginnings of his solo career in the late '90s. While hardcore and indie folk might represent two extremes, the musicians who are versed in the ethos of punk tend to have a more imaginative approach to their folk leanings than those who come up in the sleepy coffeehouse scenes. Be it production, instrumentation, or political lyrical undertones, there's a slightly different perspective that's always under the surface. This has always been the case with
, whose fragile voice and stoic playing have always just barely hidden themes of pain and longing more aggressive than helpless. With his tenth studio outing,
Maraqopa
,
offers his most colorful and nuanced set of songs yet, and while they're a far cry from hardcore, they wander into places well removed -- and far more interesting -- than his earlier wounded troubador role. Beginning with the dusty road psychedelia of "Nothing Is the News," the album takes on a vividly live feel. Meandering lead guitars and bristling drums back up
's ghostly multi-tracked vocal arrangements, sounding like a modern take on '70s British folk-rock. Some of his earlier work could fall under the Americana bracket, but the far-out production of
Richard Swift
, reprising the collaboration he and
began on 2010's
Saint Bartlett
, pushes the songs to their least predictable limits. Echoplex-treated anguished screams, organ swells, and the shakingly creepy children's chorus backing up every line of "Life Away from the Garden" are perhaps the opposite of typically cloying Americana.
reaches its peak on the
Phil Spector-ish
"Reel to Reel." The lush production packs in dozens of disjointed sounds yet remains wide open, offering ample room for
to deliver earnestly beautiful lines to his subject: a bedroom rock star offering the narrator "The greatest songs I'll ever hear from a band you started in your mind." It's a touchingly naked moment, and ironically, happening in one of the busiest arrangements on the album. Painting from a broad palette of sounds and singing from a well of strong melodies, the record works best as a whole piece, revealing new elements and deeper dynamics with subsequent listens. While
's life as an angry young punk may not be apparent from his work on
, what can be heard vividly is a bold progression that encapsulates all the phases that came before it and results in his most adventurous and fulfilling work to date. ~ Fred Thomas
Damien Jurado
is one of the better examples of the somewhat invisible but very real trend of gentle folk musicians who started out in hardcore bands. Along with
Mark Thousands
(whose work in
Youth of Today
gave way to a hushed solo career),
Dan Littleton
(
the Hated
to
Ida
), and even
Ian MacKaye
Minor Threat
and
Fugazi
eventually mellowing into
the Evens
),
Jurado
's punk past was held in stark contrast to the spare folk dirges that marked the beginnings of his solo career in the late '90s. While hardcore and indie folk might represent two extremes, the musicians who are versed in the ethos of punk tend to have a more imaginative approach to their folk leanings than those who come up in the sleepy coffeehouse scenes. Be it production, instrumentation, or political lyrical undertones, there's a slightly different perspective that's always under the surface. This has always been the case with
, whose fragile voice and stoic playing have always just barely hidden themes of pain and longing more aggressive than helpless. With his tenth studio outing,
Maraqopa
,
offers his most colorful and nuanced set of songs yet, and while they're a far cry from hardcore, they wander into places well removed -- and far more interesting -- than his earlier wounded troubador role. Beginning with the dusty road psychedelia of "Nothing Is the News," the album takes on a vividly live feel. Meandering lead guitars and bristling drums back up
's ghostly multi-tracked vocal arrangements, sounding like a modern take on '70s British folk-rock. Some of his earlier work could fall under the Americana bracket, but the far-out production of
Richard Swift
, reprising the collaboration he and
began on 2010's
Saint Bartlett
, pushes the songs to their least predictable limits. Echoplex-treated anguished screams, organ swells, and the shakingly creepy children's chorus backing up every line of "Life Away from the Garden" are perhaps the opposite of typically cloying Americana.
reaches its peak on the
Phil Spector-ish
"Reel to Reel." The lush production packs in dozens of disjointed sounds yet remains wide open, offering ample room for
to deliver earnestly beautiful lines to his subject: a bedroom rock star offering the narrator "The greatest songs I'll ever hear from a band you started in your mind." It's a touchingly naked moment, and ironically, happening in one of the busiest arrangements on the album. Painting from a broad palette of sounds and singing from a well of strong melodies, the record works best as a whole piece, revealing new elements and deeper dynamics with subsequent listens. While
's life as an angry young punk may not be apparent from his work on
, what can be heard vividly is a bold progression that encapsulates all the phases that came before it and results in his most adventurous and fulfilling work to date. ~ Fred Thomas
Seattle singer/songwriter
Damien Jurado
is one of the better examples of the somewhat invisible but very real trend of gentle folk musicians who started out in hardcore bands. Along with
Mark Thousands
(whose work in
Youth of Today
gave way to a hushed solo career),
Dan Littleton
(
the Hated
to
Ida
), and even
Ian MacKaye
Minor Threat
and
Fugazi
eventually mellowing into
the Evens
),
Jurado
's punk past was held in stark contrast to the spare folk dirges that marked the beginnings of his solo career in the late '90s. While hardcore and indie folk might represent two extremes, the musicians who are versed in the ethos of punk tend to have a more imaginative approach to their folk leanings than those who come up in the sleepy coffeehouse scenes. Be it production, instrumentation, or political lyrical undertones, there's a slightly different perspective that's always under the surface. This has always been the case with
, whose fragile voice and stoic playing have always just barely hidden themes of pain and longing more aggressive than helpless. With his tenth studio outing,
Maraqopa
,
offers his most colorful and nuanced set of songs yet, and while they're a far cry from hardcore, they wander into places well removed -- and far more interesting -- than his earlier wounded troubador role. Beginning with the dusty road psychedelia of "Nothing Is the News," the album takes on a vividly live feel. Meandering lead guitars and bristling drums back up
's ghostly multi-tracked vocal arrangements, sounding like a modern take on '70s British folk-rock. Some of his earlier work could fall under the Americana bracket, but the far-out production of
Richard Swift
, reprising the collaboration he and
began on 2010's
Saint Bartlett
, pushes the songs to their least predictable limits. Echoplex-treated anguished screams, organ swells, and the shakingly creepy children's chorus backing up every line of "Life Away from the Garden" are perhaps the opposite of typically cloying Americana.
reaches its peak on the
Phil Spector-ish
"Reel to Reel." The lush production packs in dozens of disjointed sounds yet remains wide open, offering ample room for
to deliver earnestly beautiful lines to his subject: a bedroom rock star offering the narrator "The greatest songs I'll ever hear from a band you started in your mind." It's a touchingly naked moment, and ironically, happening in one of the busiest arrangements on the album. Painting from a broad palette of sounds and singing from a well of strong melodies, the record works best as a whole piece, revealing new elements and deeper dynamics with subsequent listens. While
's life as an angry young punk may not be apparent from his work on
, what can be heard vividly is a bold progression that encapsulates all the phases that came before it and results in his most adventurous and fulfilling work to date. ~ Fred Thomas
Damien Jurado
is one of the better examples of the somewhat invisible but very real trend of gentle folk musicians who started out in hardcore bands. Along with
Mark Thousands
(whose work in
Youth of Today
gave way to a hushed solo career),
Dan Littleton
(
the Hated
to
Ida
), and even
Ian MacKaye
Minor Threat
and
Fugazi
eventually mellowing into
the Evens
),
Jurado
's punk past was held in stark contrast to the spare folk dirges that marked the beginnings of his solo career in the late '90s. While hardcore and indie folk might represent two extremes, the musicians who are versed in the ethos of punk tend to have a more imaginative approach to their folk leanings than those who come up in the sleepy coffeehouse scenes. Be it production, instrumentation, or political lyrical undertones, there's a slightly different perspective that's always under the surface. This has always been the case with
, whose fragile voice and stoic playing have always just barely hidden themes of pain and longing more aggressive than helpless. With his tenth studio outing,
Maraqopa
,
offers his most colorful and nuanced set of songs yet, and while they're a far cry from hardcore, they wander into places well removed -- and far more interesting -- than his earlier wounded troubador role. Beginning with the dusty road psychedelia of "Nothing Is the News," the album takes on a vividly live feel. Meandering lead guitars and bristling drums back up
's ghostly multi-tracked vocal arrangements, sounding like a modern take on '70s British folk-rock. Some of his earlier work could fall under the Americana bracket, but the far-out production of
Richard Swift
, reprising the collaboration he and
began on 2010's
Saint Bartlett
, pushes the songs to their least predictable limits. Echoplex-treated anguished screams, organ swells, and the shakingly creepy children's chorus backing up every line of "Life Away from the Garden" are perhaps the opposite of typically cloying Americana.
reaches its peak on the
Phil Spector-ish
"Reel to Reel." The lush production packs in dozens of disjointed sounds yet remains wide open, offering ample room for
to deliver earnestly beautiful lines to his subject: a bedroom rock star offering the narrator "The greatest songs I'll ever hear from a band you started in your mind." It's a touchingly naked moment, and ironically, happening in one of the busiest arrangements on the album. Painting from a broad palette of sounds and singing from a well of strong melodies, the record works best as a whole piece, revealing new elements and deeper dynamics with subsequent listens. While
's life as an angry young punk may not be apparent from his work on
, what can be heard vividly is a bold progression that encapsulates all the phases that came before it and results in his most adventurous and fulfilling work to date. ~ Fred Thomas
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