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Ghosts of the Great Highway

 
Album Review: Ghosts of the Great Highway

  • Artist: Sun Kil Moon
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: November 04, 2003
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Sun Kil Moon is a new band project fronted by Mark Kozelek of the Red House Painters. Given the composition of Ghosts of the Great Highway, it's difficult to see how it will all turn out in the end, given that Kozelek takes on the roles of singer, songwriter, guitarist and who knows what else, while the band sports two drummers in Anthony Koutsos (also formerly of RHP), and Tim Mooney (from American Music Club and the Toiling Midgets), as well as bassist Geoff Stanfield, who came from the ruins of Black Lab. There's a string trio present on the album, as well as some minimal use of keyboards, but the propulsive sounds here are guitars, drums, and Kozelek's haunted, Neil Young-inflected voice. Fans of RHP's later work, such as Songs for a Blue Guitar, may be prepared for the material here -- but then again, maybe not. There is a decidedly languid pace here that is not as mopey as RHP, and the melodies are more pronounced and out front, purposefully intertwining with the layers of guitars and strings. Lyrically, Kozelek is as obsessed with memory and the romance of it as ever. In "Glenn Tipton," the opening track, Kozelek compares the blows received by Sonny Liston and Cassius Clay to the debated preference by fans for one Judas Priest guitarist (K.K. Downing) over another (Glenn Tipton), and Jim Nabors over Bobby Vinton, and contrasts them with his own memories of his father watching late-night movies on TV, as he observes himself doing the same thing, and finally, with the death of a friend who owned a donut shop. An acoustic guitar is the sole accompaniment that this tune full of non sequiturs needs through its verses, before a 12-string, organic percussion and bass enter the middle. The lyrics may not add up, but they evoke the notion of nostalgia, the ache of time's passage, and the dreams of what might have been. "Carry Me Ohio," with its slowly rung electric guitars, dual tap kits, and stripped-to-the-bone bassline, is a lexicon. Side by side narratives of broken lovers and Kozelek's boyhood years in Ohio turn in on one another, and into the shimmering drift guitars and a limpid pulse. There are two versions of "Salvador Sanchez": one is straight from the Crazy Horse riff book. Kozelek tells a heroic and heartbreaking story of the champion featherweight boxer, the "magic matador," who died at the age of 23 in an auto accident. The guitar solos open and wind, and the drums usher in the great textured feedback in the bridge. "Duk Koo Kim" appeared in a different version from Cameron Crowe's Vinyl Records label earlier this year. Here it's over 14 minutes long; it's a swirling, kaleidoscopic, instrumental with strings, xylophones, guitars, and drums everywhere. It's a dream cycle that has its roots in the most brilliant and dynamic psychedelia, and charts a panoramic vista of lush textures and towering sonic waves. "Si Paloma," with its acoustic guitars piled on top of one another, and mandolins thrown in for good measure, is its mirror image, all bright, sprightly, and shiny, like a full-on mariachi band playing Big Star. The disc closes with another bout of mirror logic in "Pancho Villa." The cut is simply a gorgeous acoustic read of "Salvador Sanchez," given the different arrangement and the placement of Kozelek's voice in the mix -- not to mention his changing accents in the lyrics; it's a different song, hunted and haunted by its predecessor, sending the record off in a mist of myths and legends, where memory is as present as the moment one lives in, and as distant as whatever it took to get there. The bottom line here is that Kozelek's aesthetic with Sun Kil Moon may not be radically different than his RHP project, but it is moving, graceful, and consciously beautiful. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Glenn Tipton (Lyrics) Sun Kil Moon, Mark Kozelek Sun Kil Moon (4:16)
Carry Me Ohio (Lyrics) Sun Kil Moon, Mark Kozelek Sun Kil Moon (6:21)
Salvador Sanchez (Lyrics) Sun Kil Moon, Mark Kozelek Sun Kil Moon (6:29)
Last Tide (Lyrics) Mark Kozelek, Sun Kil Moon Sun Kil Moon (2:55)
Floating (Lyrics) Sun Kil Moon, Mark Kozelek Sun Kil Moon (3:19)
Gentle Moon (Lyrics) Mark Kozelek, Sun Kil Moon Sun Kil Moon (5:18)
Lily and Parrots (Lyrics) Sun Kil Moon, Mark Kozelek Sun Kil Moon (4:18)
Duk Koo Kim Sun Kil Moon, Mark Kozelek Sun Kil Moon (14:32)
Si Paloma Mark Kozelek Sun Kil Moon (5:32)
Pancho Villa (Lyrics) Mark Kozelek, Sun Kil Moon Sun Kil Moon (5:12)

Credits

Tim Mooney (Group Member), Anthony Koutsos (Group Member), Alan Molina (Musician), Aaron Prellwitz (Engineer), Mark Kozelek (Writer), Michi Aceret (Musician), Kendra Binney (Design), Aaron Prellwitz (Mixing), Mark Kozelek (Group Member), Claire Bryant (Musician), Geoff Stanfield (Group Member), Mark Kozelek (Producer), Jerry Vessel (Musician), David Revelli (Musician), John Golden (Mastering), Geoff Stanfield (Engineer)
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Wikipedia: Ghosts of the Great Highway
Top
Ghosts of the Great Highway
Studio album by Sun Kil Moon
Released November 4, 2003
February 6, 2007 (re-issue)
Genre Alternative rock, folk rock
Length 58:12 (album)
21:15 (bonus disc)
Label Jetset Records
Caldo Verde Records
Producer Mark Kozelek
Professional reviews
Sun Kil Moon chronology
Ghosts of the Great Highway
(2003)
Tiny Cities
(2005)

Ghosts of the Great Highway is the 2003 debut album by San Francisco quartet Sun Kil Moon, led by Red House Painters' founder Mark Kozelek, who composed all of the lyrics and music on this album. The other members are Anthony Koutsos (former drummer for Red House Painters) Geoff Stanfield, and Tim Mooney.

Ghosts of the Great Highway received positive reviews from the music press and its success paved the way for the release of two further Sun Kil Moon albums, Tiny Cities (2005), a collection of Modest Mouse cover versions, and the entirely self-composed April (2008).

Ghosts of the Great Highway was re-issued as a double CD on February 6, 2007 on Kozelek's own label, Caldo Verde Records. The second disc features 6 bonus tracks, including two versions of Leonard Bernstein's "Somewhere," and the instrumental track "Arrival," which was originally recorded for the movie The Girl Next Door. The songs "Carry Me Ohio" and "Lily and Parrots" were featured in the film Shopgirl, where Kozelek also co-starred.

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Mark Kozelek

# Title Length
1. "Glenn Tipton"   4:16
2. "Carry Me Ohio"   6:21
3. "Salvador Sanchez"   6:29
4. "Last Tide"   2:55
5. "Floating"   3:19
6. "Gentle Moon"   5:18
7. "Lily and Parrots"   4:18
8. "Duk Koo Kim"   14:32
9. "Sí, Paloma"   5:32
10. "Pancho Villa"   5:12
Double 12" vinyl bonus track
# Title Writer(s) Length
11. "Gentle Moon" (Acoustic) Kozelek 4:57
2007 re-issue bonus disc
# Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Somewhere"   Bernstein 2:13
2. "Carry Me Ohio" (Alternate Version) Kozelek 5:24
3. "Salvador Sanchez" (Acoustic) Kozelek 4:14
4. "The Arrival"   Kozelek 2:28
5. "Somewhere" (Version 2) Bernstein 2:15
6. "Gentle Moon" (Live Radio Recording) Kozelek 4:41

Singles

  • "Duk Koo Kim" (Mark Kozelek solo) (September 15, 2003)
    • Limited edition 10" vinyl single (limited to 2,000 copies worldwide), features acoustic studio version and live version.

External links


 
 

 

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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 Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ghosts of the Great Highway" Read more