Sun Kil Moon
Universal Themes


3.8
excellent

Review

by StrangerofSorts EMERITUS
June 11th, 2015 | 39 replies


Release Date: 2015 | Tracklist

Review Summary: I’m gonna tell you a story cos, you know, what the heck.

All things considered Mark Kozelek’s a bit of a cock. Benji had some time to sink in to the general consciousness before his awkward spat with The War on Drugs, but on-stage antics dominated news of Universal Themes from the get-go. The defiance of two empty seats was enough to provoke a rant about the music press and a particular female journalist who apparently, despite appearances, totally wants to *** him. Nice one Mark.

But that’s all part of the Mark Kozelek experience, right? It’s just a joke, he’s playing around and we should lighten up? I don’t buy it – the past three years have given us three album’s worth of diary-entry songwriting; it doesn’t give much space for a screen of private irony. Besides, if Mark’s an act it would ruin him - the rawness of his recent output relies on being a man who doesn’t hold anything back.

So he lets it all out and, as a result, it turns out he’s a cock, but then again there is an extent this dickhead-ness should be embraced. Every meter of the void between Kozelek and his audience is necessary because a lot of the appeal of his post-2012 career, for me at least, comes from the fact we have almost nothing in common. Folk fandom was all getting a bit flannel-shirt, beard and 50 ways to love organic coffee-y for a moment, but here was this confrontational old rocker with a song about how much he is going to miss his mum.

I can’t quite shake the thought that at least a little bit of the music press’ treatment of Mark, beyond the easy target of ill-judged live rants, stems from his utter failure to fulfil the folk-musician archetype. If he’s a tortured artist he’s tortured in a different room to the others: in a banjo-less, tv-filled mock-up of the classic American suburban home. Swap The Unbearable Lightness of Being for Nightstalker, vintage clothes for Walmart, and you get Mark – his musical appeal to the indie-folk crowd is an accident waiting to happen. In the end, the 20-something blogster flips between endearment and outrage at a speed too dizzying to handle. We are left confused.

This all matters quite a lot when you make music as personal as Kozelek’s, and with Universal Themes stretching songs to the 10 minute mark it takes a lot of his life to fill out the lyrics. We hear him straddle a peculiar line between mundane and alien: singing about the experience of playing himself in a movie, he chooses to focus on meeting someone new and, what seems to be the most universal theme of all, watching tv. Hidden behind the overwhelming bulk of bizarre details is a point, somewhere, but much harder to grasp than the obsessive documentation of events would suggest. Like his regular outbursts, Universal Themes invites a bewildering perspective, and we don’t really know what to think.

The method in the madness came to me while watching Aguirre, the Wrath of God, Werner Herzog’s film of a doomed expedition to El Dorado. The camera paused on the river much longer than it needed to, and though the frame kept still the river seemed to mutate under this prolonged gaze. What was once familiar is now made alien, disturbing and profound as we are forced to view it with no distractions. Later, on reading the new promotional interviews for Universal Themes, it is made more obvious. By giving such prolonged and intricate sketches of his life, Mark invites us to likewise gaze at what we would otherwise pass over: to see the profoundness of the mundane.

For all his tv binges, trash literature and shopping trips to Target, Mark’s actually coming up to some pretty highbrow *** here. Thinkers like Deleuze, Nietzsche and Heidegger have similar things to say about the purpose of art – that it should strip away the familiar to reveal the uncanny reality in what we barely think about.

Exactly what he’s revealing is difficult to describe. With Benji it was obvious and even Among the Leaves has fairly graspable threads to string the songs together; Universal Themes meanders obsessively, not so much a thematic narrative as a scattershot view of his post-Benji life. Mark is telling us what lies behind, well, Mark, which takes us to the most important question – do we care?

The answer is a resounding "mostly". Day to day life has less of a draw than death, but Mark’s got the talent to string it all together excellently. What would be complete tripe in the hands of anyone else will flourish in his, and Universal Themes finds itself book-ended by masterclasses in off-kilter but accessible structure. Some of the self-referential jokes wear thin after a couple of listens, making "Cry Me A River Williamsburg Sleeve Tattoo Blues" more skipped than not, but the background clatter of Steve Shelley keeps everything interesting when weak humour fails.

The funny thing about the outrage toward the latest Kozelek-isode is that it was completely unsurprising to anyone who has been paying attention for the last couple of albums or so. As a folk musician Mark is supposed to be a certain type of person, but he isn’t, and that should have been obvious. He's not a likeable person, but again that should have been obvious. His new material requires a more distanced approach than most of us are used to: to try to move past the uproar, wait, and see what we can take from all this when our overexposure turns the banal into something much more interesting. As he might be finding out now, this kind of concentration is a little too much to ask in an age of rapid music consumption, especially when the album release is dominated by misogyny.

It’s hard to move past this when there’s so much going on but, whether we expect to like it or not – which mostly translates to whether we expect to be able to put up with him or not, we owe it to Universal Themes to try. Despite his behaviour, it's still a great album.



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user ratings (235)
3.4
great
other reviews of this album
Jordan M. EMERITUS (4.5)
Deftly Personal and Undeniably Boring....

LowellWolfe (4.5)
Nothing said here could do this album the justice it deserves....

TheManMachine (4.5)
A relentless and beautiful and glorious 70-minute assault....



Comments:Add a Comment 
StrangerofSorts
Emeritus
June 11th 2015


2904 Comments

Album Rating: 3.8

word vomit album/ word vomit review



Life's been crazy, but I'm back. I hope this is okay.

ILoveRadiohead
June 11th 2015


46 Comments


he should get a 0.5 he raped a woman for pete's sakes

Brostep
Emeritus
June 11th 2015


4491 Comments


wow really really nice review. won't be listening but this is really nice

StrangerofSorts
Emeritus
June 11th 2015


2904 Comments

Album Rating: 3.8

"he should get a 0.5 he raped a woman for pete's sakes"

??



"wow really really nice review. won't be listening but this is really nice"

Thanks man (: just edited it a bit, because it didn't quite reflect my thoughts before. Little tweaks- nothing major.



The woman he called out is a pretty controversial figure, but lovely when I met her. I'm really annoyed about the whole episode, but one of the things I wanted to convey in the review is the kind of perverse way that it makes the album more interesting. "Kanye West effect", maybe...

Gyromania
June 12th 2015


37017 Comments


yeah, mark is kind of a douchebag.

very nice review

North0House2
June 12th 2015


6153 Comments


I love Benji. I find myself singing Micheline in my head all too often... I wish Mark could be a little less salty. But I guess that's what happens to old dudes sometimes.

argonaut
June 12th 2015


818 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

The melody from Micheline sounds weirdly like Should've Been A Cowboy by Toby Keith.

StrangerofSorts
Emeritus
June 12th 2015


2904 Comments

Album Rating: 3.8

"really good review. definitely wish i wrote mine more like this, i think you got to the guts of this album really well"



Haha, cheers man. I had half of this written a while ago, and almost didn't finish it because yours is great. I don't know if you noticed but I completely and shamelessly stole an adjective.

Skoj
June 12th 2015


1885 Comments


Wow, way to set the table for the album with context. That was impressive.



gagnonov
June 14th 2015


437 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

Review is insane, album is great

Sowing
Moderator
June 14th 2015


43943 Comments


Nice review but this guy is awful

Ryus
June 14th 2015


36647 Comments


ss plz [2]

i really need to hear this
mark < 3

argonaut
June 14th 2015


818 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Birds Of Flims is so good.

brainmelter
Contributing Reviewer
June 14th 2015


8320 Comments


outstanding review m8

TheBarber
June 18th 2015


4130 Comments


One of my favs this year so far, it's everything I could ever want in a SKM record
Possum is one of my fav tracks on this now alongside Birds Of Flims and Garden Of Lavender

TheBarber
June 18th 2015


4130 Comments


Ali/Spinks 2 is dead weight on this though

Phlegm
July 5th 2015


7250 Comments


top rev
great album

larrytheslug
July 15th 2015


1587 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

yeah one of my favorites this year

Phlegm
July 22nd 2015


7250 Comments


Garden of Lavender is lovely

Relinquished
October 6th 2015


48718 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

crazy how mark went all boards of canada on the new track



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