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Barnes and Noble

Getting Into Knives

Current price: $15.99
Getting Into Knives
Getting Into Knives

Barnes and Noble

Getting Into Knives

Current price: $15.99

Size: CD

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Let's get the first big question out of the way: No,
Getting into Knives
is not a concept album about knives. Even casual observers are aware by now that lead
Mountain Goat
John Darnielle
loves few things more than a set of songs unified by a particular theme. But after regaling us with stories of professional wrestlers, goths struggling with maturity, fantasy role-playing games and the people who love them, or French history, this time
Darnielle
and his cohorts have given us a set of 13 songs about as many different characters, all trying to move forward in their lives and make sense of the world around them. While these people don't have anything particular in common, that doesn't mean
has gotten lazy or lost focus; as befits his status as a published author,
plays like a collection of short stories, with a similar unifying feel but a different angle of attack for each chapter. These are people aiming high in life, with some sounding confident but reasonable and others possibly deluded yet unafraid.
's songs are unusually literate and thoughtful without seeming forced or pretentious, and with time he's become a composer whose music is as effective as his verse.
may well be the best-crafted and most musically satisfying album
the Mountain Goats
have released to date. Cut in Memphis in March 2020, it finds
and his core trio --
Peter Hughes
on bass,
Matt Douglas
on keyboards, woodwinds, and guitars, and
Jon Wurster
on drums -- playing with the sure-footed interplay of a crack jazz band, even as the melodies are rooted in pop. The easy but vital nuance of the arrangements is reinforced by the welcome interludes from the guest musicians (including
Charles Hodges
of the legendary
Hi Records
house band on organ), and
has learned how to sing with an authority that matches the skill set of the band and gives his characters life and personality.
Songs for Pierre Chuvin
, released earlier the same year, demonstrated that
isn't afraid to go back to his lo-fi roots when fate forces his hand, but
reminds us he's at the peak of his abilities in the art of record-making, and reminds us it's possible for a band to be brilliant without a shred of arrogance. ~ Mark Deming

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