Field Songs

AlbumJan 01 / 199912 songs, 42m 25s
Singer-Songwriter Folk Rock Acoustic Rock
Popular

If anyone has proven it\'s the singer not the song, it\'s Mark Lanegan. The former singer of the Screaming Trees has fashioned a solo career that relies on the chilling impact of his deep, dark howl of a voice. Whether he\'s delivering a set of covers, as on his previous release *I\'ll Take Care of You*, or expressing his ominous visions with his own self-penned compositions, it\'s the voice that ties everything together. Pianos float past. Acoustic guitars tinker in the background. The semblance of a small band forms. Feedback erupts as electric guitars pick up speed and aggression. Yet, it\'s Lanegan\'s sobering authority, the way he delivers a desperate line as the circus surrounds him, that makes everything he\'s recorded worth hearing. The disturbing quietude of \"One Way Street,\" the nearly mirthful celebration underlining \"No Easy Action,\" the hazy dreamscape looming over \"Kimiko\'s Dream House\" and the dead-end blues of \"She Done Too Much\" and \"Fix\" are worthy starting points. But any one of his albums from *The Winding Sheet* to *Bubblegum* are worth the time under the headphones for serious study.

Best known for his years as vocalist for the Screaming Trees, Mark Lanegan returns with his fifth solo album. With the new album Mark seems to have gone back through all his previous work, and taken the best elements from each to create one of the most fulfilled, and fulfilling, albums of his career; a demonstration of his continued love of singer/songwriters and American folk and blues. Field Songs also includes one of the songs (“Kimiko’s Dream House”) which Mark co-wrote with Jeffrey Lee Pierce of Gun Club fame.

8.0 / 10

In 1997, nearly every critic in the country lauded Smithsonian/Folkways' re-release of Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk ...

Those looking for some stylistic shifts in Mark Lanegan's fifth solo outing might be a bit disappointed.