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Music Reviews | September 13, 2007
Recorded in Montreal with Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band and various other contributors as his backing band, the album has a raw immediacy that his recent releases have lacked. Despite the large cast of contributors, the songs have a stripped-down and brittle feel, even when the Silver Mt. Zion boys add their group harmonies to “Glossolalia” and walls of wailing guitar distortion submerge his fragile vocals in “Everything I Saw.” As always, Chesnutt is an arrestingly vivid songwriter, but whereas his last few records were so polished and richly produced that his words were easy to overlook, the harshly rough-around-the-edges tone of North Star Deserter provides a match for his bleakly self-searching narratives. Chesnutt is at his best when allowed to assume center stage and let his wit and imagination run free; the emphasis on presenting his songs in their skeletal forms allows them to maintain their edge. In that respect, it’s the most urgent-sounding album he has made since the mid-‘90s, and is full of the uncomfortable energy that made him so fascinating in the first place. - Matt Fink Vic Chesnutt: www.vicchesnutt.com Email This
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