White, Jim / Searching for the Wrong-Eyed J
Album: | Searching for the Wrong-Eyed J | Collection: | General | |
Artist: | White, Jim | Added: | Aug 2005 | |
Label: | Luka Bop |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2006-01-01 | Pull Date: | 2006-03-05 |
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Week Ending: | Feb 19 | Jan 29 | Jan 15 | Jan 8 |
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Airplays: | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Apr 21, 2010: | Lyric Ballads/Spider Rave
Crosbones Style |
4. | Feb 15, 2006: | Deep in the Groove
Still Waters |
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2. | Feb 24, 2010: | Denver Verses
The Last Kind Words |
5. | Jan 24, 2006: | The Sad Men's Club (NYC edition)
Christmas Day |
|
3. | Feb 17, 2006: | college radio!
Crosbones Style |
6. | Jan 13, 2006: | Deep in the Groove
Crosbones Style |
Album Review
matthew stark rubin
Reviewed 2005-12-14
Reviewed 2005-12-14
Jim White Presents… “Searching for the Wrong Eyes Jesus” Original Movie Soundtrack. Luaka Bop, Reviewed by Matthew Stark Rubin. FCC CLEAN.
Indie-Folk. This is a soundtrack, with folkster Jim White most heavily represented and curating the whole affair. His songs are typical indie-folk of the slightly dark, brooding variety, storytelling in the lyrics. The rest of the artists here compliment his stuff nicely. A bunch of singer/songwriters doing that whole rootsy-and-gritty-but-bittersweet-and-profound thing, plus some classic traditionals. The theme is the American South, and it’s clear that White envisions himself as a modern day Flannery O’Conner using music to capture the depression of the region. Is it accurate? Probably not. But a nice listen all the same.
Picks: 2, 4, 5, 14
Track 1- Short dialogue. DO NOT PLAY.
Track 2- fingerpicking in the moody folk style with sporadic acoustic bass. Tells a somewhat incoherent story in a nice, calm voice with pretty, airy female backing vox. Towards the end it starts to groove a bit with more pronounced bass, some percussion and echoing guitars.
Track 3- Sorta country with some eerie atmospheric background. Two-step bass-line with dancey drums and some minor chords. Reminds me of mark knopfler’s solo work but more country.
Track 4- You all know this song. Cat Power’s most radio-ready hit. Sad 4 note guitar pattern and drum-machine like dance beat the whole time. Her classic vocal style- unstable, upset, and awesome. She harmonizes beautifully with herself in this one. Play it!
Track 5- Dark minor key blues. Aggressive, plaintive singing with a deep voice. Almost sounds like a spiritual number adopted for voice and guitar. It’s about a girl, I think, but it talks a lot about the Mississippi river. You get the idea.
Track 6- Acoustic guitar and bass start with a vamp. Singer tells story with rare spurts of melody. Melody starts creeping in and suddenly we get drums, full instrumentation, and a catchy pop refrain. Rest of the song alternates between these styles. A little corny for my tastes.
Track 7- Banjo or Dobra, I can’t tell, but just that. Spiritual singing atop. This one belongs in the O Brother Where Art Thou department.
Track 8- Just talking, NOT A SONG. DO NOT PLAY.
Track 9- Another minor key dance number in the verse. Singer has a really interesting voice. The chorus is even darker than the verse and more straight-ahead alt-country rock.
Track 10- Traditional bluegrass number, banjo and twangy voice (almost yodel).
Track 11- I swear these are the same chords as “Everybody Hurts” by REM. Just an electric guitar and a sad-sack sounding southern dude singing about having no job and how and why he robbed the feed store. Then a woman takes over singing with vibrato. REALLY BORING but the lyrics are stupid enough to keep it a little funny at least. At the end he kills someone.
Track 12- Doc Watson plays the blues. It’s classic bluegrass/blues. ‘Nuff said.
Track 13- This is Amazing Grace done instrumental and weird. Various car and other noises in the background while some odd instrument that sounds like the wind whistles the tune.
Track 14- Some Jim O’Rourke-like noise effects and synth with sad guitar picking. Pretty and standard singing on top of the less secure instrumental foundation. The chorus adds percussion, slide guitar, and a catchy vocal part, but not a lame one like track 6. Eventually he’s riffing off of the lyrics of Amazing Grace, and it’s cool. Pretty.
Track 15- More talking. DO NOT PLAY.
Indie-Folk. This is a soundtrack, with folkster Jim White most heavily represented and curating the whole affair. His songs are typical indie-folk of the slightly dark, brooding variety, storytelling in the lyrics. The rest of the artists here compliment his stuff nicely. A bunch of singer/songwriters doing that whole rootsy-and-gritty-but-bittersweet-and-profound thing, plus some classic traditionals. The theme is the American South, and it’s clear that White envisions himself as a modern day Flannery O’Conner using music to capture the depression of the region. Is it accurate? Probably not. But a nice listen all the same.
Picks: 2, 4, 5, 14
Track 1- Short dialogue. DO NOT PLAY.
Track 2- fingerpicking in the moody folk style with sporadic acoustic bass. Tells a somewhat incoherent story in a nice, calm voice with pretty, airy female backing vox. Towards the end it starts to groove a bit with more pronounced bass, some percussion and echoing guitars.
Track 3- Sorta country with some eerie atmospheric background. Two-step bass-line with dancey drums and some minor chords. Reminds me of mark knopfler’s solo work but more country.
Track 4- You all know this song. Cat Power’s most radio-ready hit. Sad 4 note guitar pattern and drum-machine like dance beat the whole time. Her classic vocal style- unstable, upset, and awesome. She harmonizes beautifully with herself in this one. Play it!
Track 5- Dark minor key blues. Aggressive, plaintive singing with a deep voice. Almost sounds like a spiritual number adopted for voice and guitar. It’s about a girl, I think, but it talks a lot about the Mississippi river. You get the idea.
Track 6- Acoustic guitar and bass start with a vamp. Singer tells story with rare spurts of melody. Melody starts creeping in and suddenly we get drums, full instrumentation, and a catchy pop refrain. Rest of the song alternates between these styles. A little corny for my tastes.
Track 7- Banjo or Dobra, I can’t tell, but just that. Spiritual singing atop. This one belongs in the O Brother Where Art Thou department.
Track 8- Just talking, NOT A SONG. DO NOT PLAY.
Track 9- Another minor key dance number in the verse. Singer has a really interesting voice. The chorus is even darker than the verse and more straight-ahead alt-country rock.
Track 10- Traditional bluegrass number, banjo and twangy voice (almost yodel).
Track 11- I swear these are the same chords as “Everybody Hurts” by REM. Just an electric guitar and a sad-sack sounding southern dude singing about having no job and how and why he robbed the feed store. Then a woman takes over singing with vibrato. REALLY BORING but the lyrics are stupid enough to keep it a little funny at least. At the end he kills someone.
Track 12- Doc Watson plays the blues. It’s classic bluegrass/blues. ‘Nuff said.
Track 13- This is Amazing Grace done instrumental and weird. Various car and other noises in the background while some odd instrument that sounds like the wind whistles the tune.
Track 14- Some Jim O’Rourke-like noise effects and synth with sad guitar picking. Pretty and standard singing on top of the less secure instrumental foundation. The chorus adds percussion, slide guitar, and a catchy vocal part, but not a lame one like track 6. Eventually he’s riffing off of the lyrics of Amazing Grace, and it’s cool. Pretty.
Track 15- More talking. DO NOT PLAY.
Track Listing
1. | Everything Was Stories | 9. | Black Soul Choir | |||
2. | Still Waters | 10. | Little Maggie | |||
3. | My Sisters Tiny Hands | 11. | First there Was | |||
4. | Crosbones Style | 12. | Coo Coo Bird | |||
5. | The Last Kind Words | 13. | Amazing Grace | |||
6. | The Wound that Never Heals | 14. | Christmas Day | |||
7. | Wayfaring Stranger | 15. | Essential Truth | |||
8. | Small Town | . |