A summer release just in time for winter
Buy CD: The Lord Dog Bird
Sounds Like: halfway into your long journey from home, you fully realize the devastating truth you've been avoiding: you can never go back.
RIYL: Iron and Wine, Rachel's, Afghan Whigs, moping
Response: When Colin McCann went off to make a solo album, I assumed it would be filled with more of the pounding, gritty riffs that he was known for as the guitarist for Wilderness. However, The Lord Dog Bird, McCann's solitary moniker, is one of the most haunting, emotive albums I've ever heard. I would rank it with Master and Everyone, Ugly but Honest, and Devotion and Doubt as an album that wraps a tight, stubborn fist around my heart.
If the sense of alone-ness on Bon Iver's For Emma, Forever Ago made you phone your friends just to hear the sound of their voices, then the eponymous album by The Lord Dog Bird will make you feel like every soul on earth is just out of reach. McCann's trebly acoustic loops and remote howling create a solitude that traps and immobilizes the listener, offering back only it's own brand of elusive, cold redemption. In short, it's not a party record.
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