Bright Eyes
Cassadaga


4.0
excellent

Review

by Iai EMERITUS
May 16th, 2007 | 28 replies


Release Date: 2007 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Shock alert! Conor Oberst has crafted a stunning country-rock album that may well convert even long-time haters into admirers!

Prior to this, my Bright Eyes experience extended to just Lifted, Or The Story Is In The Soil, Keep Your Ear To The Ground and I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning, also known as 'The Two Obvious Ones'. My opinions on the man were mixed. I can't possibly deny that when I hear lyrics like 'No-one likes to sleep out in the gutter/Sometimes that's just the most comfortable place', hairs on my neck stand up, but the music could be a little indistinct and derivative (the song those lyrics come from lifts its melody very obviously from Beethoven), and his voice could be really, really, really irritating. Sometimes I've come away from listening to him genuinely believing he's incapable of holding a note.

"Road To Joy" was the only song I took away from those two albums, but it does get pretty heavy rotation on my iTunes, and it's on a buttload of my mp3 player's playlists. Bright Eyes became another great example of an artist I want to really enjoy, and would keep giving chances to, but that I just couldn't really throw myself into fully.

Alas! Cassadaga is EXACTLY the record I want to hear from Bright Eyes at this point. It blows both the two I've heard out of the water by even track two - "Four Winds" is effortlessly brilliant, and thrilling in the way it suggests that Bright Eyes circa-2007 can probably knock out stuff on this level in his sleep, rather than labouring the point and alienating the listener like he has in this point. Oberst's voice, in fact, doesn't appear until 60 seconds in - until that point, he lets the violin take the melody. Little touches like that make this album just seem so much more free, less forced than his past output.

Cassadaga is very much a band's album - the pedal steel guitar, the violin, the organ, the piano, even the drums have their turns to shine here. It's a format that, as far as I'm aware, is new for Bright Eyes, or it's at least one that's far more fully realised on this occasion. It results in a sound that is far more obviously indebted to country than anything I've heard from him before. There's music here you can easily imagine having come out of Nashville in the late 70s. It's also music that would probably have made The Eagles cack themselves had it been competing in the same marketplace. This is a country-rock record that re-dresses the balance towards country, becoming basically a country album that's strong, even swaggering enough to be welcomed by the rock set.

So yes, a band's albums. It just so happens that this band has a very, very good frontman. Because, for the first time, Oberst's voice here is robust. He sounds so much stronger and more confident here, perhaps because of the clearly able musicians surrounding him. Here, when he sings about not knowing his home or his place and feeling uncertain about what life is meant to be for him, he does it wistfully, with a sense of acceptance. At times, you can even imagine a knowing smirk on his face as he delivers a verse like 'I had a lengthy discussion about The Power of Myth/With a post-modern author who didn't exist/In this fictitious world all reality twists/I was a hopeless romantic, now I'm just turning tricks'.

No matter what way I cut this, the likes of "Four Winds", "Soul Singer in a Session Band", "Classic Cars", and "No-One Would Riot For Less" are just damn, damn good songs that form the heart of an album that is touching, enjoyable, melodic, and basically devoid of weak points. So far, this is 2007's most welcome shock, and I definitely expect this album to be riding high when I get around to a 'Best of 2007' list.



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user ratings (566)
3.5
great
other reviews of this album
FlawedPerfection EMERITUS (4)
Cassadaga pairs Conor Oberst's country obsessions with an orchestra as he spins more personal storie...

aboynameddirt (3.5)
While it may not be for the casual listener, Cassadega's orchestral country background makes it a lo...

Cheesewireism (4.5)
Cassadaga takes a step back, back from the chaos of modern society hypo criticism, and shows the aud...

nowhereman1991 (4.5)
Lush and tuneful country-pop that retains super-songwriter Conor Oberst's fragile lyrical voice....



Comments:Add a Comment 
FlawedPerfection
Emeritus
May 17th 2007


2807 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Yeah, pretty sweet album. I agree with everything you said here.

Two-Headed Boy
May 17th 2007


4527 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

This review is yes in a can.



Don't really like this album though. It'll probably hit me soon enough but hey.

IsItLuck?
Emeritus
May 17th 2007


4957 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

great review, agree on pretty much everything (like Road To Joy being one of his best tracks) and how the direction of this album is a nice change.

Zmev
May 17th 2007


983 Comments


This can't be!

The Jungler
May 17th 2007


4826 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I know that I need to listen to this again, but I just can't bring myself to do it. Sounds like a worse, overproduced version of I'm Wide Awake . Huge dissapointment.

Nice review though, always good to see you reviewing.

Sepstrup
May 17th 2007


1567 Comments


but the music could be a little indistinct and derivative (the song those lyrics come from lifts its melody very obviously from Beethoven)


Calling Road to Joy derivative because it uses a melody from Beethoven is like calling any hiphop album you care to mention derivative for sampling.

Sepstrup
May 17th 2007


1567 Comments


I know that you're referring to Bright Eyes in general, but you used that as an example, and I think it's a bad example. That's all I'm saying.

xmattxhardcore
December 5th 2007


422 Comments


I may be the only one that thinks bright eyes are kind of bad...

Feather
August 17th 2016


10083 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

I have never gotten into anything by Bright Eyes except Wide Awake and Lifted (Both of which I have gone through absolute periods of obsession with!). I am trying to get into this one more and the first half of the album seems to click and then I lose interest, maybe I just need more time with it.

Conmaniac
August 17th 2016


27676 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

eh it's kinda boring tbh. a few gems tho

Atari
Staff Reviewer
August 17th 2016


27945 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

underrated. pretty cool that the CD/booklet came with that special lense thingy so you could see extra art on the album cover. still have a copy somewhere

Conmaniac
August 17th 2016


27676 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

oh that's sick

yeah Four Winds, No One Would Riot For Less, and Lime Tree are all stellar but the rest ranges from good to boring for me

Feather
August 17th 2016


10083 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Con Ill make sure to listen to No One and Lime Tree Again. As of now the only 2 that I love off of this are 4 winds and Brakeman

Conmaniac
August 17th 2016


27676 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

no one is so gorgeous listen to it at night its almost haunting

Lime i can see why ppl think it's boring but idk

Veldin
July 20th 2018


5239 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

So underrated. It only gets better with age

klap
Emeritus
July 20th 2018


12408 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

best bright eyes

Veldin
July 20th 2018


5239 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Next to Lifted, yeah

Feather
July 20th 2018


10083 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Ill give it another listen soon

NorthernSkylark
June 15th 2019


12134 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

expected more pages here tbh

NorthernSkylark
July 20th 2019


12134 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I dig that old soul rocking country



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