SIMON JOYNER – Pocket Moon (Oct 25, Ba Da Bing/Grapefruit/BB*Island)

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  • #10859791  | PERMALINK

    hat-and-beard
    dial 45-41-000

    Registriert seit: 19.03.2004

    Beiträge: 20,530

    Grapefruit Records newsletter
    It’s Simon Joyner’s birthday today and he’s given us a new album called Pocket Moon to announce. We are taking preorders for an October 25th release date. We’re sharing the release with BB*Island, who’s doing it in Europe, and Homeland, who’s releasing the album in Australia and New Zealand.

    Pocket Moon will be available on LP in a deluxe gatefold jacket on both standard black and Translucent Marble Moon colored vinyl, as well as on CD in a gatefold digipack case. Additionally, we are offering an exclusive T-shirt designed by Sara Adkisson Joyner and inspired by imagery from Simon’s “Yellow Jacket Blues” song from the new album. The t-shirts are only available when you preorder Pocket Moon on either LP or CD.

    Some thoughts on Pocket Moon by psych/folk songwriter, James Jackson Toth:
    “Singer-songwriter” is a frustratingly confining term; to truly understand exactly just how confining, look no further than the recorded works of Simon Joyner, an artist whose work consistently transcends the narrow parameters of genre classifications and record shop bin cards. Though his music has always honored, reckoned with—wrestled with—the tradition set forth by his songwriting forebears (Cohen, Van Zandt, Ochs, Dylan, Reed to name a few), Joyner can always be counted on to defy expectations; as a lyricist, melodicist, and arranger, Joyner likes to keep us on our toes.
    For his new album Pocket Moon, Joyner opted to engage in a risky artistic challenge. Instead of leaning on his fertile pool of Omaha musicians (the amorphous Ghosts band), he asked friend and frequent collaborator Michael Krassner to assemble unknown players on his behalf specifically for this recording. He then traveled from his home base to Krassner’s “7-Track Shack” studio in Phoenix to record the album, abandoning the literal and figurative comfort zone of old habits and home field advantage. Simultaneously sparser and more immediate than 2017’s obliquely topical Step Into The Earthquake, Pocket Moon is instantly one of Joyner’s finest albums since his redoubtable 2012 double album masterpiece, Ghosts, or to some ears the excellent, sonic 180 he managed with his follow-up, Grass, Branch & Bone. Krassner’s wrecking crew is sturdy, versatile, and complementary. Utilizing a wide range of instruments and textures, the band contributes additional nuance to each of the ragged, sublime songs here. Throughout, Krassner emerges as the Lee Underwood to Joyner’s Tim Buckley: a sympathetic foil and musical empath who comes to Joyner’s music with not only the intuition born of years of collaboration and friendship (he’s produced nearly all Joyner’s albums since 1998’s “Yesterday, Tomorrow and In Between” after all), but also with a highly evolved musical ear. The result is another song cycle stylistically unified, dynamic and rich.
    Of course, there are also the lyrics. As a wordsmith Joyner belongs to a very exclusive group of living songwriters whose written lyrics on the page seem to suggest their own distinct, internal music. Pocket Moon—a decidedly more personal album than its predecessor—continues Joyner’s habit of “naming names.” As on previous albums, Pocket Moon contains songs that explicitly mention Joyner’s friends, family members, bandmates, and even neighbors. Habitual lyric sheet perusers will also note that Joyner is well acquainted with the mechanics of poetic form: the marvelous “Blue Eyed Boy” is written in something of an irregular pantoum; elsewhere, Joyner gracefully deploys personification, metaphor, and reification like some cornhusking John Ashbery: stars twinkle out of nervousness and cicadas mimic the radiator; coyotes throw confetti. Joyner—never one to resort to trite whiskey confessions or inscrutable word salad—tempers his spiritual, philosophical, and existential observations with a stand-up comic’s sensitivity to some of the smaller, less noticed things. Imagine the raw humanity of Tim Hardin or the deathless wisdom of Leonard Cohen rendered via the consolatory ramble of a drug buddy’s “hey, didja ever notice…”
    Pocket Moon finds Joyner’s myriad powers undiminished, his legacy assured, his muse dogged and insatiable, his writing sharper than ever. As his narrator reminds us in the devastating song “Tongue of a Child,” “…everything looks clean when you stand back so far, a swallowtail shredding its wings against the sides of this jar.” This is music as mindfulness: Joyner is unwilling to simply report the sweeping gestures but instead observes the violence, beauty, and absurdity of everyday life up close and dares you to join him in lAughing at it, ruminating on it, or running from it screaming.
    -James Jackson Toth

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    God told me to do it.
    Highlights von Rolling-Stone.de
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    #10859893  | PERMALINK

    jackofh

    Registriert seit: 27.06.2011

    Beiträge: 3,741

    Ja, sehr schön. Hier darf ich auch mal schreiben: Große Vorfreude! Das Cover ist schon einmal um Klassen besser als das von „Earthquake“. Aber ohne die Ghosts? Ich bin sehr gespannt! Hab vorhin schon die limitierte LP bei BB Island bestellt. Vorher reinzuhören will ich mir aber verkneifen. Mal sehen, ob ich das durchhalte.

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    #10859901  | PERMALINK

    snowball-jackson

    Registriert seit: 09.11.2008

    Beiträge: 3,208

    „Tongue Of A Child“ ist wieder sehr Cohen-like. Mit Cello u.ä.  Mir gefällt es wieder sehr obwohl oder gerade weil ich seine Alben immer etwas ähnlich finde.

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    Ich kannte John Prine nicht... aber er kannte mich auf jeden Fall.
    #10859911  | PERMALINK

    captainbadass
    down the wrong road both ways

    Registriert seit: 21.06.2016

    Beiträge: 1,209

    Album des Jahres!

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    ...see i ain't getting better, i am only getting behind...
    #10859991  | PERMALINK

    snowball-jackson

    Registriert seit: 09.11.2008

    Beiträge: 3,208

    captainbadassAlbum des Jahres!

    Bin gespannt.

    --

    Ich kannte John Prine nicht... aber er kannte mich auf jeden Fall.
    #10860421  | PERMALINK

    e-l

    Registriert seit: 25.05.2004

    Beiträge: 10,250

    jackofhJa, sehr schön. Hier darf ich auch mal schreiben: Große Vorfreude! Das Cover ist schon einmal um Klassen besser als das von „Earthquake“. Aber ohne die Ghosts? Ich bin sehr gespannt! Hab vorhin schon die limitierte LP bei BB Island bestellt. Vorher reinzuhören will ich mir aber verkneifen. Mal sehen, ob ich das durchhalte.

    Habe mir das auch bestellt. Durchhalten muss ich ja nicht. Die Tage mit Simon vergessen wir im Süden nicht mehr.

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    Man braucht nur ein klein bisschen Glück, dann beginnt alles wieder von vorn.
    #10863623  | PERMALINK

    shanks

    Registriert seit: 08.02.2009

    Beiträge: 16,081

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    Es ist Breitling, scheiß auf deine Aldi-Uhr / Auf meinem nächstem Cover halt ich das Excalibur
    #10925673  | PERMALINK

    bbisland

    Registriert seit: 08.10.2017

    Beiträge: 2

    Interview zu Pocket Moon bei Gästeliste
    http://www.gaesteliste.de/texte/show.html?id=990015678&_nr=1844

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    #10925979  | PERMALINK

    snowball-jackson

    Registriert seit: 09.11.2008

    Beiträge: 3,208

    Danke für das Interview. Wäre mir sonst entgangen.

    --

    Ich kannte John Prine nicht... aber er kannte mich auf jeden Fall.
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