Mockingbird

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (86 ratings)
Mockingbird album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 43:52

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A Gorgeous Record.

made-electric

I got this record as a self-titled CD-R when they came through my town in 2003, but the tracks were in a different order, and were missing 'Mockingbird' & 'Well I Don't'. These songs have been with me for 6 years now, and I can still play this front to back. Highly recommended.

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Very Good Album

slingshotcatapultspear

This is a very good album. A grower and a first time glower! Meaning it is pretty good at first, and then gets even better! Seriously, I can't believe I'm the first to review this thing. I imagine it will get some attention sooner or later...

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They Say All Music Guide

Having already worked with Casiotone for the Painfully Alone, San Francisco’s Jason Quever gets his chance at sensitive, romantic indie rock on Mockingbird, the follow-up to 2000′s Rejoicing Songs. The Papercuts’ songs are seemingly without hurt, yet, like its name implies, reveal something painful. Though the arrangements apply sparse instrumentation, Mockingbird is surprisingly lush, taking advantage of viola and keyboard (the organ in “Poor and Free” is one such highlight.) Quever’s gentle falsetto glistens and soothes, even when his vocals are too slurry to understand. When you can make them out, they imply solitude (“I just want some peace and quiet here” he sings in “My Ivory Tower”) and poetic (“You’re a page inside a book” he explains in “Pan American Blues.”) If those lyrics were more decipherable, it might add another layer of emotion. Still, Mockingbird has enough grace to remain heartfelt. – Kenyon Hopkin

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