At Home With Owen

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (55 ratings)
At Home With Owen album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 37:38

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owen.

b.b.betty

mike kinsella is just one of those people that can reach through your headphones and pull your heart out your chest, without even meaning to. this album, no good for no one, and pretty much everything him and his brother tim have ever touched is pure brilliance. you should certainly buy this album, you won't regret it.

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HIs best so far

Avard

This album is excellent; Owen's best so far. He is great live, especially in a small venue. Best time for listening: on a chilly and gray day, in your favorite chair, with a newly laundered blanket.

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All that I could wish for.

musicmoggy

Masterful composition sung from the heart. Perhaps his best work to date. The velvet underground cover (Femme Fatale) fits in so seemlessly. These breathy ballards float on mild mid-tempo acoustic guitar. Inoffensive and intimate they appeal to lost lovers because of the familiar experiences revisted. This is going on my best of 2006 list.

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They Say All Music Guide

Owen is Mike Kinsella, who is associated with such Chicago indie rock phenoms as American Football, Cap’n Jazz, and Joan of Arc. On his own, he creates dreamy, new-millennium bedroom folk dotted with all kinds of modernistic and ancient traces, such as loops, cello, piano, and sparse percussion. Kinsella is the sole auteur here, whipping up an album that sometimes leans toward such ruminative, creative songwriters as Mark Kozelek and Elliott Smith. Kinsella’s pretty dirges don’t come off as lo-fi, though; in fact, there is a surprising depth of layered textures here, in which acoustic guitar and other ephemera provide an expansive bed for Kinsella’s often homely yet pleasing hush of a voice. The instrumentation in “One of These Days” has a bucolic richness, fleshed out with spare piano plunkings and cello, while the excellent “Sad Waltzes of Pietro Crespi” pins nimble acoustic guitar runs against Kinsella’s plaintive musings on love. At Home with Owen has a contemplative, Sunday morning feel to it; it is a strong effort in which themes of yearning and wishful thinking pass dreamily across lovely musical textures, like rain on a windshield. – Erik Hage

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