Search - Johnny Dowd :: Temporary Shelter

Temporary Shelter
Johnny Dowd
Temporary Shelter
Genres: Country, Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

While Johnny Dowd seemed like a throwback to the era of Appalachian murder ballads on his 1997 debut, Wrong Side of Memphis, his third album finds the late-blooming, 52-year-old artist extending his stylistic reach. His ly...  more »

     
1

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Johnny Dowd
Title: Temporary Shelter
Members Wishing: 2
Total Copies: 0
Label: Koch Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2000
Re-Release Date: 2/13/2001
Genres: Country, Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style: Americana
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 099923820529, 742451020625

Synopsis

Amazon.com
While Johnny Dowd seemed like a throwback to the era of Appalachian murder ballads on his 1997 debut, Wrong Side of Memphis, his third album finds the late-blooming, 52-year-old artist extending his stylistic reach. His lyrics continue to probe the psyche's darkest recesses--the feverish obsessions with death, Jesus, and the disease of love--but the settings range from the nightmarish disco of "Vengeance Is Mine" to the surf beat of "Big Wave" to the cinematic expanse of "Angel Eyes." ("Zombies prowl the streets," sings the monotone Dowd. "Dead souls fill the bars.") With his voice evoking a private hell, the ethereal innocence of singer Kim Sherwood-Caso offers glimmers of redemption. Dowd's dread-laced primitivism might strike some listeners as oddly funny--unsettlingly so--but this singular artist sounds deadly serious throughout. --Don McLeese
 

CD Reviews

Magnificent.
G. Moses | Men...Of...The...Sea! | 01/21/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"As good as Johnny Dowd's first two albums are, they both have noticable flaws. His third, Temporary Shelter, on the other hand--well, I suppose I could nitpick, but I just can't bring myself to do so; this music is so overwhelmingly good that it would be futile. The album opens with 'Vengeance is Mine,' and right from the start you know this is gonna be good. Not only is it a great song--evocative, numbing, ambiguous--but it sees the incomparable Kim Sherwood-Caso taking a more prominent role than ever before; she sings lead, with Dowd's voice relegated to the background. A similar pairing is seen on the desperate, apocalyptic love song 'Hell or High Water,' which is probably the album's highlight, which is saying something. She takes over the singing duties entirely on the album closer 'Death Comes Knocking,' which is, believe it or not, Christmas song of sorts, albeit not one you're likely to hear on department store loudspeakers in December.And this is only scratching the surface. Elsewhere, there's 'Big Wave,' surely the most unnerving song about surfing ever written; the wonderfully-titled 'Sky Above, Mud Below,' with it's brilliant Sherwood-Caso-sung anti-corporal-punishment chorus; and the eight-minute-long 'Angel Eyes,' a deeply atmospheric song that my feeble linguistic powers are not up to describing.What more need be said? Dowd's most recent album, 'The Pawnbroker's Wife,' is a relative disappointment, but even if Dowd never records anything else worth listening to in his life (highly unlikely, of course), it'll all have been worth it for Temporary Shelter. A must-own."
DEATH COMES KNOCKING
04/11/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The guy gets all sorts of comparisons---Tom Waits, Johnny Cash, a derranged Hank Williams. But he doesn't sound a thing like any of them. He sounds more like Gabby Hayes weilding a chainsaw. Nor would I tag an alt-country label to it. He's more or less taken the "O" out of country if you ask me. Infact,Johnny Dowd's probably one of the most disturbing songwriters I've ever heard. Having seen him live though, he's quite the showman. So, keep in mind, there is a sense of humor buried with the body.Like his 2 previous releases, this album has the feel of some lost, Blue Velvet era David Lynch flick, cut with a strong dose of Sam Sheperd. Kim Caso Sherwood's eerie, lobotomized vocals once again add a ghostly presence to the proceedings. Johnny's guitar drills into your spine under such sentiments as VENGENCE IS MINE. ANGEL EYES is oddly moving it's own grief stricken way. The last track, DEATH COMES KNOCKING is sure to be a yultide classic in years to come. At the song's close one is left with visions of the reaper dancing round the all too quiet farmhouse at Christmas time. Infact, Christmas seems to crop up a number of times throughout the record. Call it his Christmas album."
Creepy/great/funny/strange all at once
sunra | Ithaca, NY | 07/23/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Johnny just keeps getting better, and his music never stays the same. Like an aural version of the book "Wisconsin Death Trip", this music is a harrowing experience based on reality but always with a sense of humor (if you can see it - sort of the way Eraserhead is after 20 viewings). By the way, ignore the reviewer comment about a fake accent or whatever - Johnny is from Ft. Worth and the accent is real (I live in the same town as Dowd & can vouch for it!). His live show is not to be missed, too."