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Golden Age
Daniel Martin Moore
Golden Age
Genre: Folk
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Produced by Jim James. ''Our golden age is here,'' Daniel Martin Moore sings on the title track of his latest offering, and he could easily be singing about his own career. Moore has steadily gained a following as one of o...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Daniel Martin Moore
Title: Golden Age
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: OK Recordings / SofaBurn
Release Date: 10/9/2015
Genre: Folk
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 616948919658

Synopsis

Product Description
Produced by Jim James. ''Our golden age is here,‰'' Daniel Martin Moore sings on the title track of his latest offering, and he could easily be singing about his own career. Moore has steadily gained a following as one of our most emotive and haunting singers since his acclaimed debut back in 2008. Those deeply moving vocals are pushed to new heights on Golden Age, which he coproduced with Jim James of My Morning Jacket. The album is also a whole new sound for Moore. Known for his meditative singing and guitar-driven melodies, Golden Age manages to hold onto that calming element while also giving Moore a more upbeat quality on a larger canvas. ‰''We wanted a bigger sound‰, full band treatments, strings, outer-space, and less guitar,‰'' Moore says of his collaboration with James. ‰''It was Jim's suggestion that we start each song from the perspective of the drums & bass, finding the right foundation, and then seeing how the rest of the instrumentation would fit into that. In the past, it had very much been the other way around‰, everything was based around what my guitar was up to. We turned that on its head for this record.''‰ The result is Moore‰'s best album to date. Golden Age defies description beyond being a solid and beautiful record, lyrically tight and sonically adventurous. DMM's debut was a storied one: after serving in the Peace Corps, Moore sent an unsolicited four-song demo to the legendary Sub Pop Records that garnered him a record deal. Sub Pop released three of his records: Stray Age in 2008, co-produced with Joe Chiccarelli, Dear Companion in 2010, an album of duets with acclaimed cellist and singer Ben Sollee, which James also produced, and In the Cool of the Day in 2011, a deeply spiritual album that reimagined gospel. Along the way he played at the Newport Folk Festival, toured the world, and became a darling of NPR. Moore went on to found his own record label (OK Recordings) and release two more albums (Farthest Field in 2012 with Joan Shelley, and Archives, Vol. I. in 2013). Through it all James has been one of his biggest supporters and frequent contributors. Their artistic vision gelled completely on Golden Age. James says the album is much like ‰a flower tucked back in the tall grass‰ and hopes that listeners ‰will recognize themselves reflected back from the sounds and discover a magical place for their mind to wander and wonder.‰ Moore found James‰'s presence a centering force. ‰''He is always encouraging the pushing of boundaries. It's in his nature to expand and elaborate until he finds the spot he's looking for. He's a deep well of creative energy - it‰'s like he can see the way the future bends the present.‰''ť The record is populated by a fine cast of players and singers including a masterful Dan Dorff, Jr. on piano, organ, and keyboards; Dave Givan providing rousing percussion; Alana Rocklin and Zak Appleby (Houndmouth) weaving bass grooves throughout while Charlie Patton‰'s cello and Scott Moore‰'s violin float like evocative ghosts. Joan Shelley‰'s ethereal vocals are on fine display here in what Moore calls her ‰''inspiring ability for disappearing into a harmony'' and James bringing his unique guitar stylings and vocals. Again and again Golden Age reminds us that this is an album that is not afraid to celebrate love, friendship, and‰ best of all‰ the wonderful power of outright possibility that is suggested by every song on the record. Always there is the power of music in Golden Age‰'s expressive piano solos, in the thump of bass, in the soaring vocals or in lyrics that tell us ‰maybe we can never know / these things we love so well / but the music never leaves / the dusk & the dawn & the memories.‰

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