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Ghosts of the Great Highway is the remarkable debut album from MarkKozelek's
long-anticipated new band, Sun Kil Moon. As anyone who has followed
Kozeleks career over the past twelve years expects, the songs
featured on Ghosts of the Great Highway carry with them
a perceptible amount of intrigue with the joys and struggles of
everyday life. But while the songs often concern themselves with
the frightful power of memory and the romantic lure of looking back,
they are fueled by the propulsive energy that occurs when a new
band finds its spark. The new bands chemistry is undeniable.
Whether its the gorgeous string trio underpinning Last
Tide, Kozeleks stunning jump to the falsetto register
for Duk Koo Kim, the unexpected driving post-punk rhythms
of Lily and Parrots, or the compelling personal reminiscences
of Floating, the material simultaneously expands and
refines Kozeleks trademark sound. He has always used songwriting
to redefine the past and to better understand the future; nowhere
is that more evident than on this most recent collection. The songs
on Ghosts of the Great Highway concern themselves more
than ever with matters of life and death, without ever forgetting
the inherent magic of a pretty melody or a gripping beat.
Collectors may immediately recognize Duk Koo Kim, as
two solo versions of the song appeared on a limited edition 10-inch
record issued by film director Cameron Crowes Vinyl Records
earlier in 2003. However, the version here pushes the limits even
further, building slowly to a dizzying climax of Portuguese guitar
and xylophone as the song heads over the fourteen-minute mark. Salvador
Sanchez recalls the Crazy Horse-styled guitarplay of the Red
House Painters Songs for a Blue Guitar , and pays
tribute to the boxer who lost his life in his early twenties. Glenn
Tipton, named for the Judas Priest guitarist, speaks of Tipton,
his cohort KK Downing, Kozeleks dad, and the passing of a
local donut shop owner whom Kozelek had known over the years. Carry
Me Ohio reflects on the world Kozelek left behind in his teens,
whereas Lily and Parrots was written after a walk through
Kozeleks favorite San Francisco neighborhood, Telegraph Hill.
Ghosts of the Great Highway was recorded in San Francisco
between March 2002 and May 2003 with drummers Anthony Koutsos (Red
House Painters) and Tim Mooney (American Music Club), Seattle bassist
Geoff Stanfield (formerly of Black Lab), and a string trio from
the San Francisco Conservatory. The album was recorded by San Francisco
engineer Aaron Prellwitz (Red House Painters, Hella).
Mark Kozelek recorded six studio albums with Red House Painters,
three solo albums, including Whats Next to the Moon,
a collection of AC/DC songs reinterpreted and served as producer
for Take Me Home: A Tribute to John Denver. The two-CD
Retrospective collects various rarities and live tracks
and favored RHP material. Kozelek has toured with his band and as
solo performer throughout the United States, United Kingdom, Spain,
Sweden and South Korea. He scored the independent film Last
Ball and acted in Cameron Crowes critically acclaimed
Almost Famous. His music has been licensed and featured
in television programs and several films, including the recent Vanilla
Sky. Recently, a selection of Kozeleks lyrics were published
as a limited edition book, Nights of Passed Over, in
Portugal.
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