Damaged

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (141 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 48:06

eMusic Review

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J. Edward Keyes

Editor-in-Chief

04.22.11
Gorgeous, intricate, unclassifiable, unforgettable.
2006 | Label: City Slang / V2 Records

Lambchop has had to weather a number of absurd descriptions over the course of their 12-year existence. They've been branded alt-country, indie-jazz and — most famously and commonly — country-soul. None of these tags is accurate, but the fact that there are so many of them gets to a deeper issue with the band, one that arguably has a lot to do with their modest stature in the U.S. The trouble is that no one knows quite what to do with Lambchop, so they either concoct a series of ill-fitting genre tags or, worse, label them "unclassifiable," which makes them sound garrulous or willfully avant-garde.

Which is a shame, because Lambchop's music is beautiful, all thirteen of the group's members dissolving into one softly glowing whole. Never have so many sounded like so few. Each note is perfectly, deliberately placed, like a top layer on a house of cards or a brush stroke on a blank canvas. Starting with 1996's Thriller, their work has become increasingly gorgeous and intricate, culminating with 2004's two-part masterpiece Aw C'mon/No You C'mon. Damaged takes a step back from the grandeur of those records, opting instead for songs with plenty of open space.

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I sure love Lambchop records

snakearmy

Damaged is a solid album. Lambchop's going back to the quieter sound they nailed with "Is a Woman" a few years back. Not quite as quiet, but nowhere near as grandly cinematic as the C'mon albums. While I can't truly say "Damaged" is as essential as "Nixon" or "Is A Woman", this album's still loaded with great tracks, helped it part by the Hands Off Cuba fellas' electronics. My favorite track on here is "Prepared (2)". The same song is on the coLab ep, but this version's much more interesting to the ear.

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Thanks

hilariuS

What a brilliant album this is. My favorite since How I Quit Smoking. "Remember when you did acid as a kid"; who else writes lines like this?

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sublime

MrNad

Another great album from one of the best songwriters of the last 10 years, the run of albums since 2000 is simply astounding. Maybe if Kurt Wagner traded in his farming cap for something more fashionable he would get the recognition he deserves. 'Paperback Bible'is my favorite song of the year...brilliant!

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Lovely

jimmyk

Kurt produces another beauty - personal, profound and full of exquisite sadness.

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Lambchop

beklaus

this album is probably good

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As Steady as a Heartbeat

kronski

Kurt Wagner and company deliver another stellar Lambchop record. The first few times I spun this record, I found myself nodding off, bored and disappointed by the lack of dynamics. After a time, the record took on a level of sophistication and melody that I could not drag myself away from its grasp. Start off with 'Paperback Bible' and play it until it unlocks in your head, a journey begins with one step.

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okok

win.win

thats interesting ... a little squirt of mint sauce on top wouldnt do any more damage, though . but i like it raw too, so ...

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They Say All Media Guide

After the ambitious sweep of releasing two full albums on a single day in 2004 and creating a collaborative electronic EP with Hands Off Cuba while assembling a collection of singles and rarities in 2005, one can hardly blame Kurt Wagner and his partners in Lambchop for wanting to take on a less challenging project for the group’s ninth album proper. And indeed, Damaged is a simpler and more streamlined effort than Lambchop have offered over their last several releases. Damaged is a set of ten elegant tone poems which rarely call full attention to the size and scope of the 15-person ensemble (enhanced with a string section) employed for these sessions. But don’t get the idea Wagner and his cohorts have gotten lazy; Damaged is as moving and accomplished an album as this band has ever made, with the subtle but expert musicianship used in the service of a handful of songs which look deep into the heart of longing, disappointment, and the troubling mysteries of faith. If you’re hoping for an easy-to-follow narrative from Wagner’s songs, you’ll be disappointed, but through a collection of accumulated, gestured, offhand asides and occasional confessions of weakness, he creates a world that’s telling, poignant, and as real as the dust in the air on a Sunday morning. And the mighty Lambchop ensemble approaches the melodies with the care and dynamics of a great orchestra, where each note is carefully balanced as if it was assembling a house of cards that can miraculously balance a grand piano. While Lambchop’s country gestures recede a bit on Damaged, as a master class in the art and craft of record-making in the great Nashville tradition, this album is a true wonder, a quiet and deliberate recording that cumulatively hits with a massive emotional impact. This ranks with the best work of one of America’s most original musical visionaries. – Mark Deming

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