
Sam Beam a.k.a. Iron & Wine is a 51 year old singer/songwriter from Durham, North Carolina who made his debut in 2002 with The Creek Drank the Cradle under Sub Pop Records. He would also drop Our Endless Numbered Days & The Shepherd’s Dogthough the Seattle, Washington indie label until signing to Warner Records for Kiss Each Other Clean. Ghost on Ghost was more relaxed than anything Sam had done previously & he would form his own imprint Black Cricket Recordings afterwards, returning to Sub Pop via distributing Beast Epic as well as Light Verse & now his 7th album in front of us.
“Roses” starts us off with this Americana opener likening honesty to an 8 ball in the dark & beauty lasting just as long as lightning whereas “Paper & Stone” leans towards a singer/songwriter direction sings about a relationship that’s like a game of rock, paper, scissors. “Robin’s Egg” featuring I’m with Her finds the 2 over an acoustic guitar explaining they did it for love when that’s what it was just before “Singing Saw” describes days walking by like they don’t know you or where to go.
Reaching the halfway point, “In Your Ocean” goes for an indie folk vibe singing about how Sam doesn’t want to be saved & wishing that the woman in mind feels the same way he does for him leading into “Defiance, Ohio” gets an anthem of it’s own assuring the broken pieces of oneself will come alive ‘till they roll off the road. “Wait Up” featuring I’m with Her reunites the pair 1 last time singing about neither of them passing up a good experience & giving up when the apocalypse comes.
“Grace Notes” continues the latter half of Hen’s Teeth with more indie folk production cautioning that the ghosts we deny will haunt us for the remainder of our lives while “Dates & Dead People” throws it back to the Light Verse era for 6 minutes celebrating a love that he compares to an empty cloud. “Half Measures” to me felt like a great note to end the LP on, not wanting to say goodbye & trying to keep what’s left behind even if most people would like to let it go with ease.
Maintaining the predominant chamber folk & singer/songwriter elements of Light Verse a couple years earlier, Sam Beam a.k.a. Iron & Wine noticeably puts a darker & more robust spin on those 2 styles of music to the point where Hen’s Teeth can be considered a fraternal twin of sorts to it’s predecessor. The secondary influences of Americana are still prevalent despite the indie folk undertones being ditched in favor of experimenting with folk rock & it’s almost as if Sam gave us a gift out of the impossible.
Score: 3.5/5
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