Tennessee Fire (CD)
MY MORNING JACKET is a Louisville, Kentucky four-piece Country & Rock band built around the vocal and songwriting talent of 21-year-old group leader Jim James. Their sound is hauntingly classic Americana that, at times, you'll swear is coming from a veteran Country singer you've heard, but can't quite identify. You'll think it's George Jones, Glen Campbell or some '70s Johnny Cash record missing from your mental archive rather than some fresh group of young bucks. MY MORNING JACKET combines classic Country elements with the melancoly vibes of Harvest and After the Gold Rush era Neil Young, Pet Sounds era Beach Boys, and the immortal vocal stylings of The Righteous Brothers. These boys sing harmony like nobody's business. MY MORNING JACKET don't know much about the "indie" world and of what they do know, they couldn't care less. When we first querried James about Louisville music history he lit up, "Slint 7/8s timing bullshit. I'm talking about writing a fuckin' song!." The Eagles and Simon and Garfunkel were who James claimed were in heavy rotation and absorption at his residence. The closest they come in comparison to the modern guitar sound is with the languid, pre-slow-core aural heroin of On Fire era Galaxie 500. MY MORNING JACKET are not another interesting but pretentious, posturing, or campy alt-country derivation. There ain't nothin' trendy about 'em. They're the real deal. This is their debut full length release and will follow appearances on Little Darla has a Treat for You, v.11 and v.12 compilation CDs and the Darla x 4 7" featuring That Bastard Soul, Holiday Flyer and The Photon Band. James recorded this collection of songs at home on cassette 4-track, on A-DAT at MY MORNING JACKET'S studio in an out-building at home in rural Louisville, and we hired Chris Koltay to record four songs on 2"/16 track analog at The Afgan Whigs studio, Ultrasuede, in Cincinnati, OH. Most satisfying.
| Tracklisting | |
| Disk | 1 | |
| 1 | Heartbreakin Man |
| 2 | They Ran |
| 3 | Bear |
| 4 | Nashville to Kentucky |
| 5 | Old Sept. Blues |
| 6 | If All Else Fails |
| 7 | It's About Twilight Now |
| 8 | Evelyn Is Not Real |
| 9 | War Begun |
| 10 | Picture of You |
| 11 | I Will Be There When You Die |
| 12 | Dark |
| 13 | By My Car |
| 14 | Butch Cassidy |
| 15 | I Think I'm Going to Hell |
| 16 | [Untitled Track] |
| Billy
- chicago, , USA |
| So many bands these days are trying to create music that falls between the genres of country and classic rock.Unfortunately most of their half-assed attemps don't quite hit the mark. This isn't the case with My Morning Jacket. They have the "sound" and style that everyone has been desperately searching for. Jim James' sweetly strained vocals will leave even the meanest cowboy teary-eyed. These guys are the real deal. I even heard the drummer is a truck driver (how much more country can you get?)Are they Indie-rock visionaries? Are they brilliant outsider art? It doesn't really matter because this is the best album i've heard in a very long time. Be the first on your block to jump on the MMJ band-wagon before they become too trendy for all you indie-nerds.My Morning Jacket is sure to be the next big thing so get their CD while its still wonderfully obscure. | |
| Hunter Mack
- Berkeley, CA, 94710 |
| This album sounds distant; one approaches life from an arm's length away, slowly testing the waters of emotion and experience. Occasionally finding the perfect balance of hope and happiness, My Morning Jacket captured the appropriate environment for this album, crafting a collection of tracks that echo the South and the future simultaneously. | |
| Jan van Doorn
- Amsterdam, , Netherlands |
| I was in musicland a store in Amsterdam and they said you must hear this and that was my first time i hear my morning jacket. I buy the CD and there was it I was sitting in my chair with a big smile on my face and I like the warm sound of the voices and the echo's it is wonderfull.I hear all the hero's of the rock history in the music it's a mish mash of Neil Young, Beach Boys, Beatles, the Cats and more. A great album. | |