Where Shall You Take Me?

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (214 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 31:37

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Yes...

lil_lil_carol

This is Damien Jurado's best album from an artistic standpoint...it is. I think it will be remembered as his masterpiece record.

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genuinely exceptional

some-farcical-aquatic-ceremony

This may still be my favourite Jurado album, although I suspect that is because it is the first I heard. His ability to tell stories within songs in unnerving, and quite extraordinary. He is without doubt my favourite contemporary singer/songwriter, and this album may be one I listen to more than any other I own. Unreservedly recommended

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Good Stuff

JoshMan

Damien Jurado is hard not to like, great music to do just about anything to. I listen to this often at work. I still think he BEST work is I Break Chairs, which eMusic doesn't have but this one and last year's album are right up there.

They Say All Media Guide

Arriving just a year after the surprisingly eclectic and electric rock of I Break Chairs, Damien Jurado’s Where Shall You Take Me? is something of a return — but not a retreat — to the moody minimalism of albums like Ghost of David. Songs like “Amateur Night” and “Omaha” share the acoustic strumming and rustic, shuffling rhythms of his earlier work, but also have a subtly polished confidence that brings out the warmth in Jurado’s singing and playing as never before. The country and folk elements always present in his music come to the fore on “Abilene” and “Window,” which, with its sweet, close harmonies, borrows equally from the traditions of bluegrass and hymns. A devotional thread runs through Where Shall You Take Me?, particularly on its second half, where “I Can’t Get Over You” and “Tether” contrast love’s complexities with deceptively simple melodies and arrangements. Overall, the album is less challenging than I Break Chairs, although “Texas to Ohio” recalls that work’s Springsteen-influenced rock sound and the spooky, drum machine-driven “Intoxicated Hands” is a beautifully brooding ballad that rivals Jurado’s darkest moments. While Where Shall You Take Me? might be less ambitious than its predecessor, it certainly has its own compelling charms; the album has an off the cuff, direct feel that suggests it was recorded with a few friends over the course of an afternoon, particularly on songs like “Matinee.” More importantly, Jurado’s singing and songwriting are affecting in virtually any setting and on any scope. Where Shall You Take Me? is a small triumph, but a triumph nonetheless. – Heather Phares

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