Mason Jennings - Blood of Man [Digipak] *
CD
Performer
 
Title
 
Blood of Man [Digipak] *
UPC
 
60252716062
Genre
 
Folk
Released
 
09/15/2009
List Price $13.95
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Track Listing - click icons to preview tracks in Windows Media Player.
1
Windows Media MuzeTune
City of Ghosts
2
Windows Media MuzeTune
Pittsburgh
3
Windows Media MuzeTune
Field, The
4
Windows Media MuzeTune
Tourist
5
Windows Media MuzeTune
Black Wind Blowing
6
Windows Media MuzeTune
Ain't No Friend of Mine
7
Windows Media MuzeTune
Sing Out
8
Windows Media MuzeTune
Sunlight
9
Windows Media MuzeTune
Lonely Road
10
Windows Media MuzeTune
Blood of Man
Notes / Reviews

Photographers: Scott Soens; Danny Clinch.
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. Jennings handles all the instrumental duties himself, embracing slightly imperfect performances rather than smoothing them out, and the album's production--also helmed entirely by Jennings--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 BLOOD OF MAN concerns itself with all the raw aspects of life, from war to addiction to heartbreak. Jennings 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. USE YOUR VOICE, from 2004, had a similar agenda, and BLOOD OF MAN 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.
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. Jennings handles all the instrumental duties himself, embracing slightly imperfect performances rather than smoothing them out, and the album's production -- also helmed entirely by Jennings -- 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 Blood of Man concerns itself with all the raw aspects of life, from war to addiction to heartbreak. Jennings 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 Blood of Man 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

Rolling Stone (p.98) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "On his best album yet, Jennings goes much darker, with chilling tales of addiction, madness and loss, all wrapped up in fuzzy electric guitars, feedback and raw, distorted vocals."

Details
Performers
 
Producer
 
Engineer
 
Label
 
Brushfire Records
Catalog #
 
001333902
SPAR Code
 
n/a
Year of Original Release
 
2009
Mono/Stereo
 
Stereo
Studio/Live Performance
 
Studio
Distributor
 
Universal Distribution
# of Discs
 
1