Anyone who caught singer-songwriter Matt Duke at his early shows in
the Philadelphia area or on Manhattan s Lower East Side a few years
back would have discovered an artist whose musical vocabulary was
nothing short of astonishing. His tee-shirt/jeans/baseball cap
attire may have seemed reassuringly familiar, but Duke s
performances immediately took listeners into uncharted territory. A
self-taught guitarist, Duke s acoustic playing was often full of
abrupt stops and starts, unexpected changes of direction, complex
rhythms that came off more like jazz than folk or rock, challenging
the limits of his acoustic instrument. His voice could be quietly
confessional at first, then escalate to an impassioned wail, as
startlingly intense by the end of a song as it was gently intimate
at the start. In a world of heart-on-their-sleeve
singer-songwriters, Duke pushed past the conventions of the genre,
combining elements of jazz, folk and pop, even grunge and
progressive rock, with unbridled emotion to create a sound very
much his own. Kingdom Underground, Duke s Rykodisc debut, is just
as daring as those buzz-generating gigs. Duke is an ambitious
songwriter, fashioning dramatic sagas about troubled souls who
struggle with romance, life, death and, perhaps most of all, with
themselves. His words can be intriguingly ambiguous: the
house-bound couple on Opossum, for example, might be dealing with
agoraphobia or maybe even the end of the world. He can also be
exhilaratingly forthright, as on Walk It Off, a no-minced-words
rocker about a bruising lover s spat. The unlisted title track,
hidden on the disc, lends a cinematically foreboding tone to the
proceedings, with a dark, electronic feel to it that recalls Trent
Reznor at his most brooding. Not all of Duke s material is of a
life-or-death nature, however. Rabbit is a tender, spare ballad at
the heart of the album. Sex and Reruns takes a sardonic look, with
a surprisingly easy-going pop feel, at the self-medicating
properties of the internet and TV, whether you happen to be bored,
lonely or having difficulties composing your next song.Addressing
the complicated, philosophical/spiritual subject matter he
gravitated towards on Kingdom Underground, Duke jokingly decides it
must be his Irish Catholic background. But then he says, Love songs
I put those aside. I hear them on the radio so often. Writing about
love and breakups is almost tired. The whole idea of your spiritual
unrest, what you believe in and what you don t, what you re
struggling with now and what you will struggle with for the rest of
your life, were, for some reason, the things that were the easiest
to write about. It s very rare that I d write about relationships;
it s mostly how everyday, trivial, petty problems could be
associated with a greater issue. That s what I get the most
inspiration from. And I don t think I ll ever get tired writing
about that stuff.
General
Label: |
ADA
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
February 2009 |
Originally released: |
September 2008 |
Performers: |
Matt Duke
|
Dimensions: |
125 x 140 x 8mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
|
Running time: |
38 minutes |
Categories: |
Music >
Pop / Rock
Promotions
|
LSN: |
XGM-680-B10-7 |
Barcode: |
0014431095528 |
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Disk 1
1 |
The Father the Son and the Harlot's Ghost |
2 |
Sex and Reruns |
3 |
30 Some Days |
4 |
I've Got Atrophy On the Brain |
5 |
Rabbit |
6 |
Opossum |
7 |
A Happy Hooligan |
8 |
Rose |
9 |
Walk It Off |
10 |
Spilt Milk |
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