I Like to Keep Myself in Pain

AlbumJun 05 / 201213 songs, 44m 34s
Alt-Country Singer-Songwriter
Popular Highly Rated

As a singer/songwriter who\'s found her way into the alt.country sphere, Kelly Hogan captures the feel of vintage roots music, with a touch of soul that\'s garnered her comparisons to Bobbie \"Ode to Billie Joe\" Gentry and Shelby Lynne. Hogan\'s first solo album in 11 years shows it\'s a shame she hasn\'t recorded more on her own. (She\'s lately taken work as a backup singer in Neko Case\'s group.) Here, Hogan\'s backing band is solid and tasteful, starring Booker T. Jones on organ, Gabriel Roth of The Dap-Kings on bass, and James Gadson on drums. Aside from the self-penned \"Golden,\" the songs come from other writers. M. Ward\'s \"Daddy\'s Little Girl\" is presented as an apology from Frank Sinatra to his daughter Nancy. Jack Pendarvis and Andrew Bird\'s \"We Can\'t Have Nice Things\" recounts domestic violence, while Hogan\'s smoky vocal evokes a nightclub feel. \"Plant White Roses\" is a classic tender ballad from The Magnetic Fields\' Stephin Merritt. But it\'s Vic Chesnutt\'s \"Ways of This World\" that really captures the steamy American South of Hogan\'s Georgia roots and her connection to Gentry\'s sultriness. 

6.0 / 10

Hogan releases her fourth solo album in 20 years, a collection of covers that fit beautifully on the whole, if often all too comfortably.

6.0 / 10

Hogan releases her fourth solo album in 20 years, a collection of covers that fit beautifully on the whole, if often all too comfortably.

C

The music business is like any other—it’s good to have connections. Kelly Hogan is a longtime insider that never really caught on with the public. After the collapse of The Jody Grind and the release of three solo albums in the late ’90s and early ’00s, Hogan struggled to pay her band and gave up solo recording. …

C

The music business is like any other—it’s good to have connections. Kelly Hogan is a longtime insider that never really caught on with the public. After the collapse of The Jody Grind and the release of three solo albums in the late ’90s and early ’00s, Hogan struggled to pay her band and gave up solo recording. …

7.7 / 10

With Hogan, “Pain” worth the wait

7.7 / 10

With Hogan, “Pain” worth the wait

Check out our album review of Artist's I Like To Keep Myself In Pain on Rolling Stone.com.

Check out our album review of Artist's I Like To Keep Myself In Pain on Rolling Stone.com.

The album cements Kelly Hogan’s status as an interpretive singer with few equals.

The album cements Kelly Hogan’s status as an interpretive singer with few equals.

8 / 10

8 / 10

80 %

80 %

8 / 10

8 / 10