eMusic Review
When he started recording as Red House Painters in the early '90s, Mark Kozelek's chief strength was his ability to make blunt emotional declarations sound poetic and mysterious by submerging them beneath churning, milky guitars. But Kozelek started running on fumes fast, relying on mealy singer-songwriter concoctions that fell far short of the drawn-out codeine coma of his early work. But then he stumbled on a new role: that of interpreter. His 2001 record of AC/DC covers found him burrowing past the machismo to find a genuinely wounded core cowering behind the bravado. His take on the band's snide and sexist "You Ain't Got A Hold on Me" cannily subverts the song's central tenet, making it sound less like a kiss-off and more like a desperate attempt by the singer to convince himself of the sentiment.
He takes a similar tack on this collection of Modest Mouse songs, with wildly varying results. Because the Seattle outfit isn't as aesthetically distant as Bon and the boys, there's less here for Kozelek to undo or uncover. As a result, the album feels like little more than a series of soporific covers, offering few new entryways into the material.
The songs that… read more »