Arguably their best work to date, their new album, Befriended, is a haunting collection of 10 songs that features the interplay of Don's gorgeously warm and shimmering electric guitars with Karen's transcendently love...
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Arguably their best work to date, their new album, Befriended, is a haunting collection of 10 songs that features the interplay of Don's gorgeously warm and shimmering electric guitars with Karen's transcendently lovely vocals and moving lyrics.
Arguably their best work to date, their new album, Befriended, is a haunting collection of 10 songs that features the interplay of Don's gorgeously warm and shimmering electric guitars with Karen's transcendently lovely vocals and moving lyrics. Often earmarked as the group's most recognizable sound, Karen's voice is a thing of wonder yet at the same time, has a familiar comfort to it, not unlike a beloved mother singing a lullaby to an adoring child. On Befriended, the influences of folk-legends like Simon and Garfunkel and Fairport Convention are evident, yet The Innocence Mission carve out a sound, at once melancholic and joyful, that is all their own.
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"The Innocence Mission possess enough precious quirks to effectively repel even the most charitable of corduroy- heavy, cat-owning bookstore clerks: the players met during their Catholic high school's production of Godspell, the band's singer/guitarist and singer/songwriter married not long after, and Karen Paris still consistently employs phrases like "purity of heart" to describe the Mission's soft, dulcet sound. But Befriended, the band's seventh full-length since forming in 1986, is pretty far from the unabashedly maudlin whining and sentimental gushes their circumstances suggest. Floating on the crushing strength of Peris' breathy, pitch-perfect coo, Befriended is a bucolic, nuanced bit of Sunday morning coffee-and-wistfulness, lovingly strummed acoustic guitars (augmented by the occasional organ line, sparingly applied upright bass, and light, flickering drums), rolling out time-tested chords with unwavering earnestness, revisiting the sweet, confessional early-70s folk of Joni Mitchell and the late-80s lilt of the Sundays and Cocteau Twins.
....Befriended tugs along gently, contemplative and casual, sauntering purposefully but never building to a full-on sprint or, even, anxious trot. Rather than wearying, Befriended's consistent tempo allows for the formulation of a strikingly cohesive record, an extended stroll through an impressionistically- rendered New England autumn, pastoral and occasionally inspired.
"Tomorrow on the Runway" sees Peris' sometimes childlike chirrup flitting easily from half-obscured whisper to confident bellow, while thick layers of scraped guitar and organ pile up; the slightly less melancholic "When Mac Was Swimming" is a sparse, airy piano-and-electric-guitar piece featuring a gently tapped tambourine as the sole percussive. "Beautiful Change" is the record's most dynamic cut, with Peris' vocals (here, echoing the Delgados' Emma Pollock) rising and falling dramatically over now- familiar guitar strums. There are certainly distinctions (both thematic and tonal) between each of the record's ten tracks, but Befriended plays best as an extended rumination, a thirty-six minute, singular experience.
The Innocence Mission's defining characteristic is their control, and if you can get past any secret desires to tear howling through the studio, knocking down drums and unplugging perfectly-positioned microphones, their restraint can be oddly engaging. Befriended might be comforting and invitingly docile, but it's also a rich, subtly textured record, executed with impressive grace."
- Amanda Petrusich, Pitchforkmedia********
5 out of 5 stars- MOJO
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