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NO DEPRESSION
MARCH - APRIL 2007
THE INNOCENCE MISSION
We Walked In Song
(Badman)
The Innocence
Mission is one of the world's most aptly named bands. The
gossamer folk-pop of their latest album, the ninth in a nearly
two-decade career, evokes the commingling of childhood and
adulthood.
Karen Peris'
lyrics are disarmingly simple; on paper they read far more like
poetry. Her distinctive airy trill never really rises above a
soft croon, fit for a lullaby or pensive reverie. She and husband
Don Peris - along with Mike Bitts, the trio's bassist and only other
member since the departure of drummer Steve Brown several years back
- clothe songs in translucent arrangements, leaving visible the
elegantly spare skeletons lying beneath.
The result is
anything but loud or dense; spacious is more like it, a fitting
environment for the delicate touch of Peris' songwriting.
(Incidentally, she dedicated We Walked In Song to her recently
deceased parents, which could be why her musings are even more
attuned than usual to the human lives around her, whether strangers
or her own son.)
The trio
builds ever so gingerly around Peris' voice, with chiming,
finger-picked guitar and washes of pump organ, keyboard, and piano.
During the album opener "Brotherhood Of Man" , her gauzy singing
rests on sparse acoustic and electric guitars and upright bass. The
"brotherhood of man" reference surfaces again near the album's end,
drifting over the ethereal sonic palette of "Colors Of The World",
which closes with the simplest, most child-like statement of all:
"You are a friend of mine."
- JEWLY HIGHT |