Damien Jurado – The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania
As part of the rollout for Damien Jurado’s personal record label,
Maraqopa Records, he is releasing a new album, one that, like creating a label,
marks a revitalization for the singer-songwriter. That, along with the death of
frequent producer/collaborator Richard Swift has led Jurado towards a different,
more tempered period in his discography. The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania is
Jurado’s 17th studio album and conceptually, it focuses on ten
disparate characters, over the course of ten songs. A unified theme that, along
with the debut of Maraqopa, helps define this album’s purpose.
Jurado is used to releasing an album every year or so, consistently
enough that it’s surprising it took him this long to take the reins of the
business end. At their worst, those albums make for some great mood music, but
at their best, especially on the work he did with Swift and on his first few
albums, they achieved a very specific kind of cinematic exuberance. It’s not
easy for someone like Jurado to turn their folky ethos towards ubiquity, but
through Swift, he was able to combine his collaborator’s pop-maximalism with his
restrained lyrical fixations.
His earliest work, on the other hand, helped to make him,
like his contemporaries Jason Molina and Will Oldham, one of the strongest
singer-songwriters at the turn of the millennium. That period was marked by skeletal
arrangements and hushed vocal deliveries, but since then Jurado has found a way
to diversify and stay relevant, even after twenty-five years of recorded output.
The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania sees Jurado employ a more pop-centric
take on that trademark sound, as a culmination of his whole discography, albeit
without the dense production and accompaniment of his Swift period.
Like any comeback record, The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania defines its transition, while circumventing it. Jurado easily toes the line between seclusion and introduction, crafting an album where even the most immediate tracks sound restrained and well worn. He took charge of the production for this album himself, and the product serves as one of the more accurate presentations of his sound. As new and refreshing as it is, it captures Jurado’s enigmatic process better than most of his albums
~8.0
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