Saturday, May 19, 2007

Its not how far you fall, it's the way you land


Great albums come along rarely so when you discover something superlative it is worth shouting about it. So pasted below is a review I have just drafted for the Otago Daily Times.

Artist: Soulsavers

Title: It’s not how far you fall, it’s the way you land

Label: V2/Shock

Opening up with quite possibly the most intriguing, mesmerising and downright addictive 4 minutes of music released in 2007, Soulsavers signal an intent to craft a piece of music brilliance and pull it off. ‘Revival’ is the track in question; a wondrous exploitation of a repeating motif that haunts the subconscious long after the album has come to a halt.

Soulsavers are the brainchild of English producers Rick Machin and Ian Glover whose previous release “Tough guys don’t dance” flew largely under the radar. Much of the success of this album then lies firmly in the throaty pipes of ex Screaming Trees front man Mark Lanegan. Not only did he contribute vocals to 8 of the 10 tracks but also he co-wrote five of the tracks.

Back in the early 90s his wonderful vocals were often buried in a grunge pit, and while his mere presence elevated the Seattle sound to a slightly different sphere, he had never quite realised his true calling, as the natural heir to the Tom Waits-Johnny Cash songbook. Though, back in 92 Lanegan hinted at something resembling this work with Soulsavers on his seminal solo release, ‘Whisky for the Holy Ghost’.

Hence it is a delight to discover that from those sessions, ‘Kingdoms of Rain’ has been resurrected. In the intervening 15 years, Lanegan’s voice has matured in a pickle of tobacco, liquor and hard living. The transformation from the original is remarkable.

Add to the mix a guest appearance by Will Oldham, a reworking of Neil Young’s ‘Though my sails’ the Stones ‘No Expectations’, and you have something that may have easily fallen over but does quite the opposite. Nothing great ever comes from playing it safe and the inclusion Spain’s ‘Spiritual’ from 95’s ‘The Blue Moods of Spain’ a case in point. The original was magnificent yet this version somehow tops it.

In danger of spewing too many superlatives, ‘It’s not how far you fall, it’s the way you land’ is a fantastic collection of 10 individually packaged moments of aural pleasure that exist somewhere between gospel, country, soul and mashed up electronica.

Rating: 5 stars
Reviewed By: Mark Orton

SoulsaversRevival

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