WHERE MUSIC RULES AND WE PITY THE FOOLS

Destroyer

Your Blues

  • AMG Review of Your Blues

    Amg
    John D. Luerssen
    All Music Guide

    Recorded with the production duo JC/DC (aka David Carswell and John Collins) -- who aided in the creation of Destroyer's first three discs -- Dan Bejar ditches the band format he used for 2002's This Night with tremendous results. Fusing a dramatic vocal style akin to that of David Bowie in the 1970s with 1980s studio achievers like Microdisney and Prefab Sprout, Your Blues is regularly breathtaking. Launched with the strummed guitar of "Notorious Lightning," Behar soon expands on his vision with the bright, synth-conceived orchestration of "An Actor's Revenge" and the fabulous, adventurous pop of "The Music Lovers." Sure, the long a cappella intro on the title cut is hard to take, but Destroyer's records are never without a challenge or two. Still, Behar quickly redeems himself with the tongue-in-cheek "New Ways of Living," which pokes fun at mid-'80s pop drama queens with lyrical and musical finesse. The flute-laced "It's Gonna Take an Airplane" is the high point here, with lyrics like "Baby, you were born to be seen/And art's just the start," but late-model standouts like the Hunky Dory-inspired "What Road" and the haunting closer, "Certain Things You Ought to Know," all help make Your Blues 2004's early front-runner for art rock album of the year.

This Mix is a Picture: Charles
about 1 year ago

Okay, remember this game? It goes like this:1) I post a photograph.2) You suggest a song that comes to you looking at the photograph.3) I assemble a mix from your suggestions.We've done this before...here and here.This time around, the photo is by Minneapolis photographer Alec Soth. I recently profiled Soth for City Pages. If you are into this kind of thing, you'll find the story and links to a...

More >

Top Your Blues Listeners

© 2006-2009 Mog Inc. All Rights Reserved