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Stunning Models on
2007
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Will Stratton
What The Night Said
About This Album
The desire to approximate what
Nick Drake
did on
Pink Moon
and apply it to one's own circumstances or era has bedeviled a couple of generations of artists. (So much so that a
Drake
comparison itself has developed the weight of cliché, yet somehow we all know that such a comparison is aimed primarily at
Pink Moon
and not at his lushly produced, earlier albums.)
Will Stratton
does not sound like
Drake
(so much), but
Stratton
has produced something stirring and hyper-personal yet universally beautiful on What the Night Said. And
Pink Moon
is the paragon of that achievement, so it is evoked here to foster understanding for a remarkable album, since most singer/songwriters fall far from that mark while chasing that comet tail in their bedrooms. That
Stratton
was barely out of his teens at the time of this album's recording (while a student at Bennington College in Vermont), makes it all that more remarkable. "Katydid" is a track of pure alchemy, dotted with bright piano notes, cello, and harpsichord, with
Stratton
's completely guileless, smooth, and breathy vocals tracked so closely as to sound like they're being poured in the listener's ear. "Sunol" does actually sound like a
Pink Moon
track, particularly in the wheeling rounds of finger plucked acoustic guitar (with heavily thumbed bass notes), but it is only a reference point, and
Stratton
's breathy close-mic vocal style is at its best on this track.
What really defines this album, though, is the lushness of
Stratton
's vision, poetically and musically. Even though his songs seem to come from a nearly monkish vantage point of isolation, there is lifting beauty here, a need for connection, and breathtaking flights, swoops, and turns of melody. From
Mark Kozelek
to
Mojave 3
to
Damon & Naomi
, so many accomplished artists have effectively set off after this precarious balance of levity and gravity; on this album
Stratton
ranks with the absolute best. ~ Erik Hage, All Music Guide
Continued…
Shortened View
Track List
(try tracks 1,2,3,4,7 and 11)
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