- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
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UncutNot for the faint-hearted, Damien Jurado is a habit which won't necessarily bring joy to the listener. But once acquired, you will find it hard to kick. [Apr 2003, p.106]
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The WireJurado's spare, edgy songs are miniature masterpieces of mood and character. [#229, p.68]
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The sparse and largely unobtrusive music, and Jurado’s wanting vocal range place the emphasis on storytelling, one his strongest assets. The results, however, are a mixed bag.
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There's a core of strength running through this darkly unobtrusive music which lends it a coherence of vision, drawing as it does on place and character as it roams the less fashionable byways of an older America, hitching the frayed strands of the past to the lurching wagon of the present.
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Easily Jurado's most successful album, both musically and lyrically.
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Alternative Press[Jurado] may be our generation's Neil Young. [Apr 2003, p.78]
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A small triumph, but a triumph nonetheless.
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MojoWhile the comparisons to Springsteen's Nebraska and Gillian Welch's Time (The Revelator) are obvious, they don't do justice to Jurado's wholly original craft. [Jun 2003, p.98]
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MagnetLess, in this case, proves to be much more; Jurado's songs just cut closer when unadorned. [#58, p.95]
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His most rewarding and assured work yet.
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Jurado's songwriting is solid, if sometimes slightly bland -- but a lack of idiosyncrasy is to be expected when an artist references such a recognizable, well-mined sound.
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Where Shall You Take Me? brings Jurado back to familiar, minimalist territory.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 12 out of 14
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Mixed: 1 out of 14
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Negative: 1 out of 14
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Sep 13, 2022Such a comfortable, self assured artist at his peak. Sparse, heavy, and beautiful.
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JohnWApr 19, 2005its not quite rehearsals for departure, but its close
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bjorkbollApr 20, 2003Beats Will Oldham at his own game. Reminiscent of old american traditionals, especially when Rosie Thomas' vocals transcend time and space.