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MP3 Mark Davis - You Came Screaming

A profound, intense, varied, and splendidly melodic pop-rock album that would have been hailed as an instant classic if a major star had made it.

10 MP3 Songs
ROCK: Folk Rock, ROCK: 90''s Rock



Details:
Voted Orange County''s Album of the Decade by the Los Angeles Times!
"**** out of four stars for you came screaming! Getting at large truths with songs full of human-scale detail and unsentamentalized beauty. A profound, intense, varied, and splendidly melodic pop-rock album that would have been hailed as an instant classic if a major star had made it."

-- Los Angeles Times
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September 9, 1995

DAVIS LIVES UP TO HIS IDEALS

By Mike Boehm L. A. Times Staff Writer

[ratings range from * (poor) to **** (excellent)]

**** Mark Davis "You Came Screaming" Cutlet Records

It has been a long time for Mark Davis. The singer-songwriter emerged on the Orange County rock scene about nine years ago with the band Clockwork. He went solo, moved to L.A. and won favorable notice as an up-and-coming folkie but missed the brass ring of a recording deal. Now. recently returned to an O. C. base, Davis arrives belatedly with a debut album on his own custom label. "You Came Screaming" proves well worth the wait.

With its delicate instrumental colors and subdued-to-moderate dynamics, "You Came Screaming" (which does nothing of the sort) is the kind of album that sometimes gets praised as a "small gem" or some such minimizing phrase -- as if only rockers who operate on a massive sonic scale, like Neil Young, Pearl Jam or U2, can get credit for full-sized achievements.

In fact, there is nothing small about what Davis has accomplished. His thematic ambitions are as large as they get. Davis considers the currents that move us toward and drive us away from the fulfillment of romantic love, charts the progress and regress of a soul craving spiritual awareness, and ponders the fearsome price of freedom; and the even higher cost of shunning it.

Graceful frequently memorable melodies fuse his ideas with feeling, and Davis'' reedy but firm voice, well-tuned in its Lennon-esque or McGuinn-like tone to express deep yearning, clinches the deal with the honesty of its pleading.

A wide, judiciously used instrumental palette includes violin and cello (in the darkly lovely mode of "Big Star''s Third"), Davis'' own piano and organ playing, and a deft but unobtrusive rock ensemble.

In his combination of intensity, intimacy, intelligence and rich musicality, Davis most closely recalls two other excellent singer-songwriters of 80'' s vintage: Peter Case and Peter Himmelman. Like them, he has found a way to make attractive and subtle music while laying bare his deepest concerns.

For an album of strong convictions, which it certainly is, "You Came Screaming" is freighted with a strong sense of ambivalence -- and that back-and-forthness, that alternating current of mixed emotions, makes for resonant songs.

Even when Davis is asserting his highest ideals in "A Different Tune," with its declaration of independence in the face of a disapproving parent, he conveys the complexity of his choices. His delivery, though firm, is not defiant or triumphant. The song has an anthem-like upward-reaching moment and features a bright, chiming guitar riff borrowed from Bob Dylan''s exuberant "I Want You," but it is not a celebration. The song, and much of the album, becomes a gloss on a theme that Bruce Springsteen once put pithily into rhyme: "No, you can''t walk away/From the price you pay."

"You Came Screaming" develops an internal flow, a cohesion that plays itself out in songs that work as thematic bookends. "devotion," a dark, tumbling rocker, weds the tense, tumbling drive of a bass line akin to the Pretenders'' "Mystery Achievement" to the mood of chill, bereft beauty of "Under The Milky Way Tonight" by the Church. At song''s end, Davis has reached his lowest emotional depth: "Wonder is bleeding on the altar/If life has no dreaming, why should I stay?"

"Devotion" had begun with the speaker gazing seaward, his spirits sinking with the sun.

"Once there was a dying day that slipped away from me

I had no cure to give it

She was laid into the horizon, a burial at sea

Left me with the living."

Two songs later, in the kind of internal symmetry that often marks albums of especially high artistry, Davis summons the memory of that same symbolic horizon. Now it''s dawn, and the luminous "Andromadine" unfolds with the return of the narrator''s ability to yearn and hope for rekindled connection to something spiritual.

The album also includes "Hollow," an eloquent, embattled affirmation that a life based on those unprovable ephemera, faith and imagination, will be richer than one lived according to the cynic''s hard evidence of human futility.

"I guess yours is the real world,

This place where war is king,

Where nights are cold and dark

And no one trusts a thing.

But I am captured by a star

I know that I must follow.

If mine is make believe,

It licks your real world hollow."

By the album''s end, Davis has ridden out the memorably drawn romantic heartbreaks of "Blind" and "Nothing but the Truth" and rejected the protected, insular, suburban ideal envisioned in "Stand on My Shoulders".

With the concluding "Reminder," in which folk-rock rides a hip-hop beat, he envisions a complete rejection of safety in favor of imagination and faith. The song is proud in its ideals but chastened in what Davis sees coming of them: its dark, straining valediction sounds more like a martyr''s final affirmation before self-immolation than a celebratory proclamation of purity and power. It''s a "reminder" of the ideals Davis cherishes but also of the price you pay if you truly give yourself to them.

Getting at large truths with songs full of human-scale detail and unsentamentalized beauty, Davis offers a great deal to anyone for nothing more than the price of a CD. _______________________________________________________________________

Los Angeles Times December 29, 1995

1995: THE YEAR IN REVIEW

MIKE BOEHM''S TOP 10 ALBUMS OF 1995

1. (Tie) Mark Cutler, "Mark Cutler & Useful Things" (Potter''s Field Records) and Mark Davis, "You Came Screaming" (Cutlet Records). The two albums I couldn''t stop listening to in ''95 were do-it-yourself releases. Cutler, former frontmen of Boston''s Raindogs, works in a classic Dylan/Petty mode; there''s something fearsomely wild in his grim visions of frustration and loss. Davis'' first album is graced by superb melodies and hall-of-fame influences. His intensely realized subject is the embattled condition of idealism in a fallen world.

3. Garbage, "Garbage"

4. Neil Young, "Mirror Ball"

5. Yo La Tengo, "Electr-o-pura"

6. Elastica, "Elastica"

7. Matthew Sweet, "100% Fun"

8. Tricky, "Maxinquaye"

9. Sonny Landreth, "South of I-10"

10. PJ Harvey, "To Bring You My Love"

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Los Angeles Times

September 29, 1999

HITTING THE HIGH NOTES

Take a Spin Through the 90''s and Revisit the Decade''s Best O.C. Pop

By Mike Boehm

TIMES STAFF WRITER

Today we give you one critic''s choices for the best Orange County-bred pop songs and albums of the 1990''s.

The picks adhere to the most narrowly subjective standard there is: my own listening pleasure. Some critics base their year/decade/tec. best-of choices on such legitimate criteria as a work''s influence, its impact on society and the music scene, and on how well the music defined its genre, its style, and its time. I''m much too selfish for that. These are the songs and albums that most strongly touched my heart, fired my imagination and captured my ears. Matters of influence and impact are worth analyzing, but ultimately, for me, experiencing music comes down to the most personal and intimate encounter: a one-on-one conversation between artist and listener.

ALBUMS OF THE DECADE

1. Mark Davis, "You Came Screaming" Cutlet (1995)

A profound, intense, varied and splendidly melodic pop-rock album that would have been hailed as an instant classic if a major star had made it.

SONGS OF THE DECADE

9. Mark Davis, "As Big As Love"

Los Angeles Times
 

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