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End of Amnesia

 
Album Review: End of Amnesia
 

  • Artist: M. Ward
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: July 17, 2001
  • Genre: Rock

Review

M.Ward's second solo enterprise verifies the artist as one of those few songwriters who stand between the cracks of time, where he spins a hallucinatory, new universe out of old-world roots. Indeed, there's a real down-home, unpolished luster to End of Amnesia, both in execution and in songwriting, that gives it a timeless, old-fashioned pallor. And yet there's also something just slightly off in the songs, a strange, disembodied quality that seems to come at least partly from an ulterior place, be it real or imagined. That attribute is precisely what gives the music such a singular, distinctive sound and vision. Ward comes off like a sort of one-man the Band with nothing but a beat-up guitar and his sepia croak of a voice. His acoustic guitar playing has the kind of impressive, gutsy virtuosity of Stephen Stills, while the music is part folk-blues à la Townes Van Zandt and part deep Appalachian pallidness, with a dash of Tin Pan Alley thrown in via the odd foot stomp or honky tonk piano run. Musicianship is superb, and as stark as the instrumentation is, there is first and foremost a special quality of songwriting that results in acoustic instrumentals (the drone-like title track, the wistful "Psalm") or nearly instrumental ballads (the gauzy, sunlike picking of "Color of Water"). The songs can be unsparing in their desolation, sound-wise if not necessarily in their worldview, although there is certainly a sense of loss present throughout. One gets the feeling, however, that the mood is less a product of a personal feeling than it is a personal perspective of a vanishing era of song, one free of commercial constraint, marketing, or trend. And yet the songs aren't long glances backward so much as they are outgrowths, seedlings from a great old uprooted tree trying to recapture some of the biblical grandeur that has wilted away, some of the lost importance, trying to refill a shadow that's no longer there. The album is a keeper, pure, simple, and unaffected but certainly not unaffecting. ~ Stanton Swihart, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
End of Amnesia Matt Ward M. Ward (2:11)
Color of Water Matt Ward M. Ward (3:23)
Half Moon Matt Ward M. Ward (2:49)
So Much Water Matt Ward M. Ward (4:02)
Bad Dreams Matt Ward M. Ward (4:16)
Archangel Tale Matt Ward M. Ward (3:48)
Silverline Matt Ward M. Ward (2:20)
Flaming Heart Matt Ward M. Ward (3:54)
Carolina Matt Ward M. Ward (4:19)
From a Pirate Radio Sermon, 1989 Matt Ward M. Ward (3:20)
Psalm Matt Ward M. Ward (3:50)
Ella Matt Ward M. Ward (3:41)
Seashell Tale Matt Ward M. Ward (3:49)
O'Brien/O'Brien's Nocturne Matt Ward M. Ward (7:40)

Credits

Tony Moreno (Assistant), Howe Gelb (Piano), Bruce Winter (Drums), Bruce Winter (Engineer), Matt Ward (?), Deanna Varagona (Brass), Deanna Varagona (?), M. Ward (Main Performer), Adam (Engineer)
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Wikipedia: End of Amnesia
Top
End of Amnesia
Studio album by M. Ward
Released July 17, 2001
Genre Folk
Length 53:22
Label Future Farmer Records
Professional reviews
M. Ward chronology
Duet for Guitars #2
(1999)
End of Amnesia
(2001)
Live Music & The Voice of Strangers
(2003)

End of Amnesia is the second studio album by M. Ward.

Track listing

  1. "End of Amnesia" – 2:11
  2. "Color of Water" – 3:23
  3. "Half Moon" – 2:49
  4. "So Much Water" – 4:02
  5. "Bad Dreams" – 4:16
  6. "Archangel Tale" – 3:48
  7. "Silverline" – 2:20
  8. "Flaming Heart" – 3:54
  9. "Carolina" – 4:19
  10. "From a Pirate Radio Sermon, 1989" – 3:20
  11. "Psalm" – 3:50
  12. "Ella" – 3:41
  13. "Seashell Tale" – 3:49
  14. "O'Brien/O'Brien's Nocturne" – 7:40



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "End of Amnesia" Read more