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Blood of Man
Barnes and Noble
Blood of Man
Current price: $19.99


Barnes and Noble
Blood of Man
Current price: $19.99
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Mason Jennings
goes electric with
Blood of Man
, which finds the Hawaii native channeling the raw, loose sounds of
Bob Dylan
and
Bruce Springsteen
. This isn't a rock & roll record, but it's the closest that
Jennings
has ever come to losing himself in amplified noise, and there's a sense of homespun energy fueling each rootsy number.
handles all the instrumental duties himself, embracing slightly imperfect performances rather than smoothing them out, and the album's production -- also helmed entirely by
-- is suitably straightforward, eschewing the usual studio polish for a simple pinch of reverb. There are stronger ways to highlight a songwriter's craft, better microphones to use, and more experienced studio musicians to enlist. But that doesn't seem to be the point here, as
concerns itself with all the raw aspects of life, from war to addiction to heartbreak.
strengthens the album by simply tying its themes together, paying attention to the various relationships between melody and instrument, lyrics and atmosphere, performance and production. 2004's
Use Your Voice
had a similar agenda, and
sounds like that album's companion piece, merging the same traces of folk, roots rock, and small-town storytelling with a simple increase in volume. ~ Andrew Leahey
goes electric with
Blood of Man
, which finds the Hawaii native channeling the raw, loose sounds of
Bob Dylan
and
Bruce Springsteen
. This isn't a rock & roll record, but it's the closest that
Jennings
has ever come to losing himself in amplified noise, and there's a sense of homespun energy fueling each rootsy number.
handles all the instrumental duties himself, embracing slightly imperfect performances rather than smoothing them out, and the album's production -- also helmed entirely by
-- is suitably straightforward, eschewing the usual studio polish for a simple pinch of reverb. There are stronger ways to highlight a songwriter's craft, better microphones to use, and more experienced studio musicians to enlist. But that doesn't seem to be the point here, as
concerns itself with all the raw aspects of life, from war to addiction to heartbreak.
strengthens the album by simply tying its themes together, paying attention to the various relationships between melody and instrument, lyrics and atmosphere, performance and production. 2004's
Use Your Voice
had a similar agenda, and
sounds like that album's companion piece, merging the same traces of folk, roots rock, and small-town storytelling with a simple increase in volume. ~ Andrew Leahey