Josephine

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (388 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 46:52

eMusic Review

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Matthew Fritch

eMusic Contributor

07.20.09
A stirring alt-country epitaph for a lost, missed friend
Label: Secretly Canadian / SC Dist.

Jason Molina's deep reservoir of dark-horse Americana doesn't always lend itself to easy sipping or casual toe-dips into the catalog. From his early years doing Will Oldham lo-fi noir (under the name Songs:Ohia) to his electric-drifter rock band (with Magnolia Electric Co.), Molina is an austere study in alt-country, his ever-growing discography littered with daunting monoliths such as the four-CD Sojourner box set.

Josephine, touted as a concept album, might not seem like the most accessible starting point. But opening track "O, Grace!" rolls in so gently on a bed of piano, acoustic guitar and winsome vocals, it feels like the Crosby, Stills & Nash tour bus just pulled over and invited you aboard. Josephine is also Molina's most ornate work, encompassing '50s slow-dance country ("The Rock Of Ages") and Appalachian a cappella ("Hope Dies Last") as well as his more familiar, Crazy Horse-inspired guitar grinding and lonesome folk laments.

The ghost in this recording is Magnolia bassist Evan Farrell, who died in 2007 in a Chicago apartment fire; according to Molina, it was Farrell who urged him to experiment with adding rich instrumentation to skeletal songs. Whether Josephine deserves to be called a concept album is debatable, but… read more »

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Great, but don't start here

CamiloM

If you have never heard Jason Molina's music before: Don't make this your introduction. It's a great album but you should hear it after being exposed to some of his other stuff first, like Songs: Ohia. This is a great album. Very subtle, dynamic country/rock.

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ok by me

VonBaron

I heard this only once at a friend's house and I was like, "that's cool."

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Not so deep

red101

The thing that seems to make Molina's voice so amazing is the depth of his lyrics. I find both disappointing, and that makes me sad.

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Mellow and brooding

blake0102

If you're familiar with Jason Molina you'll know what to expect: Mellow music and haunting lyrics. Arrow in the Gale is an amazing track. This album has yet to win me over like What Comes After the Blues.

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Slight evolution in their sound

ZGreen

This is the closest yet Molina has come to making a straight up country record; if you've been following the progression the Magnolia sound, it won't come as too much of a surprise. It's different enough though, to offer some rewarding stuff. I was bored by the last two Magnolia releases and glad to see that this one changed it up a bit and was more overtly melodic. Not Songs: Ohia to be sure, but this band never has been.

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focused and solid

DisplacedSoutherner

Although it isn't my favorite release from Jason Molina and Co., this is certainly their tightest record and demonstrates the depths of Molina's songwriting talents.

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Simply Beautiful

hifispin

This album is so beautiful. Listen to it a few times and it will echo in your head for days. I love it!

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not songs: ohia

JohnvanSpain

I love his work in Songs: Ohia but I really hate this release. Too whiney, way too country. Download only if alt-country is your thing. songs ohia fans beware.

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I may be biased

johndance

But I like everything this guy does. Full stop.

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Disappointing

JBB

"Josephine" is mostly bland countrified folk rock. Give me Molina's Young/Crazy Horse stylizing or ambient Ghost Tropic any day over these songs (with a couple exceptions).

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eMusic Features

Magnolia Electric Co.'s Josephine

By Matthew Fritch

Jason Molina's deep reservoir of dark-horse Americana doesn't always lend itself to easy sipping or casual toe-dips into the catalog. From his early years doing Will Oldham lo-fi noir (under the name Songs:Ohia) to his electric-drifter rock band (with Magnolia Electric Co.), Molina is an austere study in alt-country, his ever-growing discography littered with daunting monoliths such as the four-CD Sojourner box set. Josephine, touted as a concept album, might not seem like the most accessible… more »

They Say All Media Guide

Josephine is the first proper Magnolia Electric Co. album since 2006′s Fading Trails. In 2007, the limited-edition, four-disc Sojourner box set was issued, but it contained mostly released material, demos, and alternate versions of material recorded elsewhere with numerous lineups. Frontman and songwriter Jason Molina is accompanied by a fairly large ensemble, though the palette of instruments still centers around piano, guitars, drums, and a dobro and lapsteel. The music is strictly alternative country-inflected rock, and the arrangements are standard. That said, there is a great comfort in Molina’s limited approach to making music. While it’s true that the listener will raise her eyebrows at the duet between a saxophone and a piano on the opening “Of Grace,” the nearly constant lilt in the grain of his voice belies a kind of disillusionment that is worldweary and disappointed, and never bitter. Standouts on this set include the gorgeous title track, with its Neil Young meets old-time parlor music feel and its dynamite lyrics, to the mournful “Shenandoah” with its sweet meld of steel and electric guitars, to the snarling opening to the spooky “The Handing Down.” Along the way are spooky touches such as the B-3 and trap kit vehicle “Little Sad Eyes,” which sounds like the end title theme to a motion picture. “Heartbreak at Ten Paces,” is a minimal, turtle-paced, mournful, broken love song that belies every bit of sadness Molina can seemingly bear in its lyric and melody. In sum, Josephine is radically different from Magnolia Electric Co.’s preceding records, but it doesn’t need to be. Molina has a consistent — if downcast — view of the world in his songs, and the canvas he uses to express it does so perfectly. – Thom Jurek

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