User ratings in Music are temporarily disabled. More info
- Summary: The seventh full-length studio release from Sam Beam as Iron & Wine features a guest appearance by Fiona Apple.
Buy Now
- Record Label: Sub Pop
- Genre(s): Pop/Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock
- More Details and Credits »
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 12 out of 12
-
Mixed: 0 out of 12
-
Negative: 0 out of 12
-
Apr 30, 2024Both harmonically and melodically, Light Verse is more expansive, yet its arrangements are tighter. No longer the lone troubadour, Beam is backed by a group of LA musicians whose expert subtlety bolsters Beam’s magnetic quietude—even when Hollywood strings swell or the accompaniment reaches near cacophony.
-
May 1, 2024He’s not shaking those defining qualities on Light Verse. Instead, that distinctive voice is a foundation for towering songs, an album that grows and blooms with epic crescendos (“Yellow Jacket”), slow-burn earworm hooks (“Anyone’s Game”), and tongue-in-cheek, Shakespearean clown wisdom (“Nobody’s perfect or as dumb as their luck”).
-
Apr 24, 2024Quirky yet profound, playful but often deeply moving, Light Verse is a record to savour in one sitting, its ten tracks comprising a seriously impressive whole that’s considerably more potent than the sum of its unfailingly impressive individual parts.
-
Apr 24, 2024Pushing 50 Iron & Wine proves he still has much to say in a hypnotic record full of lush production, highlighting the warmth and timelessness of his vocals. If not one necessarily to win over new fans, this will delight longtime fans who have been along for the ride.
-
Record CollectorJun 10, 2024It took a while, but this album is certainly worth the wait. [May 2024, p.103]
-
Apr 29, 2024Light Verse is a lively, relatively breezy album, despite its somber subject matter. He worked with a new crew of musicians, including bassist Sebastian Steinberg and multi-instrumentalist Davíd Garza, who make sure their flourishes never distract from the pith of his songs.
-
May 13, 2024An album with plenty of lightness but lacking the whimsy or puerility we might associate with that poetic phrase.