Batten the Hatches

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  • Artist: Jenny Owen Youngs
  • Rating: StarStarStar
  • Release Date: 2005
  • Type: Contains explicit content, Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Jenny Owen Youngs looks like she might be another typical, long-haired hippie waif with guitar -- then she opens her mouth, and your jaw drops. Youngs' voice has that delicate, childlike quality that plagues many a folksinging female, but when she digs into a song, the dissonance between her sweet alto and the acidic images she uses to paint her bittersweet portraits of life and love is startling. "Porchrail" opens the album with a backing band that sounds like the Violent Femmes. It's a simple acoustic rocker, with a swing feel that conveys the nervous energy that floods the body when you see someone you really want and probably can't have. The jittery beat and Youngs' pleading vocal create a mood of panting desire held in check by shyness and insecurity. Meanwhile, "Fuck Was I" is a self-flagellating tale about being in thrall to a lover who can never do you any good, and yet the love abides. Her matter-of-fact vocal and the song's lilting beat make her use of the F word actually sound shocking, something that's increasingly hard to do in the 21st century. On "P.S.," Youngs plays the banjo in an arrangement with French horn, cello, bass clarinet, and foot stomps. The result sounds kinda like a Tom Waits song, dripping with irony and full of unexpected musical touches. Every song here uses the same basic formula -- dark thoughts set to uplifting music -- but it's a formula that works amazingly well. Youngs has an uncanny insight into the pains and insecurities that plague us all when we're in that vulnerable, confused position of wanting love and feeling unworthy, or wanting out of a relationship and being unable to cut loose from the obsession that makes the pain hurt so good. She also has an original voice and an ability to find light even in the darkest situations, making this a very polished and cohesive first album. ~ j. poet, Rovi

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Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Batten the Hatches

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Batten the Hatches
Studio album by Jenny Owen Youngs
Released 2005 (Canada)
Genre Indie, folk rock
Length 37:03
41:07 (reissue)
Label Self-released
Nettwerk (reissue)
Producer Ronen Ben Codor, Dan Romer
Jenny Owen Youngs chronology
The Scrappy Demo
(2004)
Batten the Hatches
(2005)
The Take Off All Your Clothes EP
(2007)
Original cover
2005 self-release artwork
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars[1]
Marie Claire 4/5 stars[2]
PopMatters 5/10 stars[3]
Rock Sound 7/10 stars[4]

Batten the Hatches is the debut album by American singer-songwriter Jenny Owen Youngs. Originally self-released in 2005 by Youngs, it was reissued with the bonus track "Drinking Song" two years later by the Nettwerk label.[5]

The track "Fuck Was I" was used in the first episode of the second season of the Showtime series Weeds, to illustrate a scene in which main character Nancy Botwin, a part-time marijuana dealer, discovers that her new lover is in fact a DEA agent. This appearance reportedly led to sales of the album increasing from between five and ten per week to between twenty and thirty per day.[6]

The album was listed as one of Guardian Unlimited's "Greatest Albums You've Never Heard" in a feature in November, 2006.[7]

Track listing

All tracks written by Jenny Owen Youngs.
  1. "Porchrail" – 1:45
  2. "From Here" – 2:16
  3. "Fuck Was I" – 3:30
  4. "Lightning Rod" – 3:27
  5. "Voice on Tape" – 3:03
  6. "P.S." – 1:52
  7. "Bricks" – 5:00
  8. "Drinking Song" – 3:38
  9. "Woodcut" – 4:18
  10. "Coyote" – 3:14
  11. "Keys Out Lights On" – 5:00
  12. "Woodcut (The Age of Rockets remix)" – 4:04
    • Remix by Andrew Futral

Personnel

Performance

Recording

  • Ronen Ben Codor – additional arrangements on track 11
  • Andrew Futral – remix (track 12, reissued version), additional arrangements on tracks 3 & 5
  • Jay Newland – mastering
  • Dan Romer – production, engineering, arrangements, mixing

Release history

Region Date Label Format Catalog
Canada 2005 Self-released CD
Canada, UK April 10, 2007 Nettwerk CD 0 6700 30648 2 8

References

External links


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Jenny Owen Youngs (Rock Artist, 2000s)