Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Iron & Wine - The Shepherd's Dog -

Iron & Wine - The Shepherd's DogSam Beam and company are back with a great new Iron & Wine record called The Shepherd's Dog just in time for the dog days of summer. About a year ago when I saw Iron & Wine's set at Lollapalooza, something was missing. The crowd was too frantic and the setting not at all right. This is music that would best be enjoyed from a front-porch rocking chair while sipping sweet tea or any cold beverage of your choice. Beam's hushed vocals and gentle acoustic guitar strums evoke images of the rural South straight out of a William Faulkner novel. I can almost see the grand white columns of a plantation house and hear the crickets in the background.

Naturally, The Shepherd's Dog picks up right where the Woman King EP left off. It is full of the same loose and lazy swamp folk that that we've known since the band's early days, but with more instrumentation and (at times) a more primal and rhythmic feel. It blossoms into an organic and almost timeless record that is one of the best I've heard all year. Between Beam's breathy drawl and a few subtly raucous stomps, The Shepherd's Dog has an enveloping sound that just gets into your pores and makes you sweat before ultimately cooling you down through the the graceful exit of "Flightless Bird, American Mouth". And even though the air conditioning is on I can just about feel the humid Florida heat pumping through my speakers when the credits finally roll.

MP3 | Iron & Wine - Boy With A Coin The Shepherd's Dog
MP3 | Iron & Wine - Lovesong Of The Buzzard The Shepherd's Dog

More MP3's at The Hype Machine or buy from Amazon | Insound | eMusic

5 Comments ↓

Blogger matthew  at 7:11 AM 

i can't wait to hear this album

Anonymous Andrew  at 10:17 AM 

Boy With A Coin is amazing, really can't wait to hear the entire album.

Blogger Housewives?  at 3:38 PM 

Yeah the new album sounds great. It’s funny, I had a similar problem when I saw him at the Bowery Ballroom. It’s kind of hard to reconcile his music with the notion that he’s a contemporary artist. It was almost like I’d turned him into a fictional character in my head so seeing him in person, much less in a place like New York City was bizarre.

Blogger Jason Dockter  at 7:35 PM 

That was really well written. I look forward to this album.

Anonymous Anonymous  at 7:50 PM 

I've been listening to the album all week. Has it not been released yet? Hmm. Sucks for you. It's great. A little sad when you get the feeling one of your favorite artists buckled down and settled for a general reliance on his newly discovered G5, but still really good. I mean really good. I wish you could hear it right now. I am listening to it, and it sounds guh-rate!!!

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