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MP3 David Israel - These are the Clothes We'll Wear When We're Old

bittersweet songs for your soul to listen to

5 MP3 Songs in this album (31:13) !
Related styles: FOLK: Psych-folk, AVANT GARDE: Avant-Americana



Details:
By Doug Freeman • Oct 25th, 2006 • Category: Sound Reviews •

It’s difficult to pinpoint exactly what separates an indie singer/songwriter from your more standard coffee house troubadour. There is a fair amount of self-deprecation and oblique life-into-art (Conor Oberst, Vic Chestnutt), clever and poetic lyrics (Dave Berman, John Darnielle), a playfulness that takes itself quite seriously (Will Oldham, Chan Marshall), and an emotional depth that is readily accessible but entirely unique and individual (Elliott Smith, Sam Beam). There’s also a trenchant appreciation of a folk line that bends towards the influence of rock and pop, drawn through the likes of Townes Van Zandt, Parsons and, of course, Dylan. But in looking over this list (and hopefully forgiving its limited, patriarchal bent), the artists mentioned all set themselves apart with a unique voice that combines all of these elements and mold them in memorable, sometimes unforgettable, songs. Whatever it may be that makes these artists stand out as songwriters and performers, David Israel seems to have it in droves.

These are the Clothes We’ll Wear When We’re Old, Israel’s debut EP, is instantly mesmerizing but also demands a repeated listening to fully mine its depths. His songs meander through whimsical and cryptic lyrics that anchor themselves in repetitive structures and allow the tune to take hold. Like Bright Eyes’ “Lua” or Smog’s “Rock Bottom Riser” (to name but a couple recent examples), the simple musical melodies allow Israel’s narratives to develop at the forefront of the song. But those narratives are not so much stories as they are collages of memories, images and visceral sensations that seem almost randomly recalled to collapse past, present and future into a half-awake dream. “The State That You’re In,” arguably the best track of the five, manages this effect beautifully. Hovering between departure and arrival in some liminal passage of memory, the song weaves through lyrics like “Oh Baby, what happened to the sixties? / I don’t know, let’s listen to the Pixies and talk / Wading in the water and the water’s gone / You stay awake and we sulk around / Yeah we sulk” or “Yeah I’m staring at your stereo screens / We all want someone who can remember our dreams forever / But I can’t.”

There is a strange calm throughout all of the songs, attributable to Israel’s low voice and the unhurried pace as he drawls out lines so thickly that the music seems often trying to slow down to catch up. Additional vocals are supplied by, among others, the sublimely talented Kerrie Hopper and Leatherbag, whose latest album Love Me Like the Devil blew us away several months ago. All of Israel’s tracks feature these layered vocals that remain slightly off pace rather than cleanly harmonizing and give the songs the feel of our eavesdropping on the stream-of-consciousness echoing inside his head. While the effect may have gotten stale through a whole album, it certainly doesn’t here, even on the nearly twelve-minute closer “If Money is Love.”

At times Israel’s lyrics push their cleverness a little too close to the edge, as with the Hefty Smurf, heart on the sleeve analogy in the final song. But even these sometimes too tongue-in-cheek moments don’t distract from the overall beauty of the songs, and by the end of the album they redeem themselves in the vein of Berman’s often quirky poetics. It’s difficult to determine what a songwriter might be capable of from a single release, and Israel’s writing does still show elements that could use more development, but These are the Clothes We’ll Wear When We’re Old is an astounding album in it’s own right and full of a promise of things to come.

(Austin Sound)

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