harry Wrote:
I wonder why I've never read anything about Damien Jurado on this board. It seems he has qualties that match Hayden, or Iron and Wine, or Smog, or other artists that have been mentioned a lot.
I had him at the top of my list in 2003, at least on one list. There were a few different albums that topped my list at one point or another that year, including Califone and the Shins and Broken Social Scene and Songs:Ohia. But here's what I said on the day he was at the top of the pile ...
1. Damien Jurado - Where shall you take me?
Wow, beautifully disturbing album. Opens with a murderer confessing "first came the screams and blood on the floor" and closes with a plea to "come save me from this fire". Not exactly what one would call a cheery evening of entertainment. But it's one of the hardest albums to stay away from in recent memory. Very compelling, for me. Abilene is surely one of the finest songs I've heard in recent times and the whole album is a gut wrencher. Many comparisons come easily to mind, most notably Springsteen's Nebraska. Or something more recent like Gillian Welch's excellent Time (The Revelator), but Jurado also evokes a Neil Young feel too, the ragged Neil Young that mourned for his lost friends on Tonight's the Night. More consistent than his Ghost of David album, but maybe not quite the severe emotional ups and downs and stellar highlights of songs like Medication and Great Today and Rosewood Casket from that one. And very short at only about 32 minutes. But nearly absent of anything I would consider a misstep as well. After a couple dozen listens, these songs just won't go away, so maybe it's wrong to say the highlights don't reach the same level as in the past. Not number one every day of the week, but it is today, so that's why it's up here at the top.