Skip to main content

Damien Jurado – The Monster Who Hated Pennsylvania (2021)

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

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Concert Review: Wilco at The Riviera Theatre, – 3/26/23

Wilco at The Riviera Theatre, – 3/26/23 Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood was once the center of the city’s booming entertainment district. Located at what had initially been the end of the L Train system, The Aragon Ballroom, Green Mill Jazz Club, and long-defunct Uptown Theatre quickly defined the corners of Broadway and Lawrence Avenue as the designated area for Chicagoans to congregate for the arts. As the area’s zeitgeist waivered though, the theatres grew into a weekend oasis of vibrancy amongst an otherwise casual and sleepy north-side neighborhood. Given Wilco’s consistent championing of Chicago’s local institutions, and another Uptown landmark Carol’s Pub in particular, The Rivera Theater seems like exactly the kind of venue for the band to host their latest three-night run and the start of their spring tour. Jeff Tweedy and company know the former movie palace well, playing there many times over the years and even using it as the base for a five-night series of performances b...

Buck Meek – Haunted Mountain (2023)

Buck Meek – Haunted Mountain   Big Thief, one of the best and most adept bands of the 21 st century, has done more in six short years than most bands can squeeze out of an entire catalog. Each of their five studio albums has managed to expand their signature homespun charm into exciting, self-contained albums. The sound always moves forward but with distinct detours projecting their country-folk and singer-songwriter tendencies over disparate palates. The band’s prolificity extends to their solo catalog as well, the most notable inclusions naturally coming from lead singer and principal songwriter Adrianne Lenker. But behind her eclipsing generational talent, is guitarist Buck Meek, an artist who could easily shepherd his own headlining band if he needed to. Aside from some early, Big Thief-adjacent work, Meek’s true breakout was with 2021’s Two Saviors , a beautiful, alt-country collection of songs, most of which approached the quality, if not the scale of his mother band’s...

Fever Ray - Radical Romantics (2023)

Fever Ray – Radical Romantics Karin Dreijer’s debut solo album Fever Ray came out only shortly after Silent Shout , an album that was almost immediately hailed as The Knife’s masterpiece. The inevitable comparisons seeped out, no one was completely ready to accept the more cavernous Fever Ray as any sort of a replacement for the lush maximalism of Dreijer and her brother’s The Knife. Regardless, Dreijer had proved how essential they were to that project and by 2014, the two had disbanded. Fever Ray’s next album Plunge continued Dreijer’s push towards empty space with an angrier and more overtly political edge and simultaneously built Fever Ray into a proper entity in its own right. Radical Romantics is a Fever Ray album in that its fixations swarm around Dreijer, all their proclivities, and all their vulnerabilities. It’s also the closest Fever Ray has ever sounded like The Knife, whether it be the soaring and anthemic “Shiver”, or the pronounced synths ripples on “New Utensi...