| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2001年04月10日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Mezzotint Label |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | 71325 |
| SKU | 613667132528 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:51:25
Personnel includes: Mark Mulcahy (vocals, various instruments); Leah Coloff (cello); Scotty Love (Moog synthesizer); Chris Harford (bass); Pasquale D'Albis (drums).
Producers include: Adam Lasus, Mark Mulcahy, Tom Gilroy.
Recorded at Fireproof Studios, Brooklyn, New York between June 30, 1999 and June 30, 2000.
Personnel: Mark Mulcahy (vocals, guitar, harmonica, organ, glockenspiel, drums, chimes); Wanda Felicia (vocals, background vocals); Leah Coloff (guitar, cello); Nigel Powell (guitar, shaker); Chris Harford (guitar); Doug Wieselman (mandolin, harmonica, clarinet); Jane Scarpantoni (cello); Isabel Weizer (background vocals).
Audio Mixers: Christopher Wells ; Adam Lasus.
Recording information: Fireproof Recording, Brooklyn, NY (06/30/1999-06/30/2000).
The title of Mark Mulcahy's second solo outing would seem to indicate that the artist is ready to drink in that light just over the last hill. But as with all sunsets, there is also a lonely darkness waiting beyond the horizon. And, indeed, in the opening "Micon the Icon," the singer moans "I need a shoulder to cry on" as if he's not quite ready to live with himself just yet. Songs like the album's first single, "I Just Shot Myself in the Foot Again," and "I Hate to Needy Need You" also betray the kind of inward-looking misery that is the sure sign of an attached and still-aching heart. Luckily, misery has rarely been as alluring as Mulcahy makes it. He translates gloom into what amounts to a sleepy dream. It may be somewhat unnerving but you, nevertheless, don't want to wake from it. The East European melody of "Until I Say So," for instance, is terribly melancholy, bit it is so gorgeously sad that you want to live in the world Mulcahy has created, where "heaven's just an ocean away." And yet, Smilesunset does have a warmer, dusk-colored cast to it that finds the songwriter coming outside just long enough to take in the last remnants of sunlight. This is especially evident in a richer production. The almost naked sound of the debut was an ideal backdrop for the raw passion and discontentment of the sentiments, but here the emotion is more vibrant and less self-directed, and the production brings out those little playful details and deeper niches. Even on the hushed cabaret-tinged songs, the sound is drunken rather than dreary, a beautifully remembered hallucination rather than a pining outcry. And Mulcahy sounds positively zealous on songs like "We're Not in Charleston Anymore" and "The Quiet One," with its jazzy lilt. Smilesunset is an amazingly fertile record, every bit as wonderful as Fathering, perhaps with an even stronger magnetic attraction. Mulcahy seems to get better with each note. ~ Stanton Swihart
録音 : ステレオ (Studio)
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