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Bon Iver's Gift  PDF Print E-mail
Music Album
Written by David Swanson   
Friday, 02 May 2008
Description
Album Detail
Album: For Emma, Forever Ago
Artist: Bon Iver
Year: 2008
Label: Jagjaguwar

Attempting to describe the debut album from Bon Iver is not unlike describing the magnolia tree currently blooming in my back yard. I could write about the colors and smells and the way the lawn under the tree turns white when a storm disturbs its petals. But it’s still just a tree until you sit on my back porch and take it in.

For Emma, For Ever Ago is a gorgeous nine-track journey filled with raspy guitars and lilting falsettos. Whether Bon Iver, front man Justin Vernon’s moniker, is journeying towards a particular destination or escaping a troubling past is left up to the listener. For my money, it’s a little of each. The strange genesis of the album is part of the allure for Vernon’s fans. At the tail end of a break-up with his band and girlfriend and feeling the affects of a bout of pneumonia, Vernon packed up his recording equipment and drove to an isolated Wisconsin cabin. The result of the months spent in relative isolation is For Emma.


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The unconventional way Vernon chose to write his songs is one of the reasons descriptions of the album fall flat. In a February interview with Treble he described the process.

...I still had all these things on my mind that had been unexpressed, like un-extracted, I guess you'd say… I compiled them and, at the end, it was very interesting for me; it was very freeing. I found all this shit, all this grudge and meaning in what I was singing, these syllables. It was weird to put them together and match them up to the sounds that I was hearing… So I was able to do all that completely unhinged, instead of having to make words that rhyme or whatever, and I was able to get lyrics that were born and meaningful to me in a way that was distant and new.

For Emma is certainly not the first album to disassemble the song-writing process. Sigur Rós’ fabricated language, Hopelandic, is perhaps the best-known example of a band intentionally communicating through incomprehensible sounds and syllables. And while Bon Iver has not invented a new language, at times his songwriting feels like a fresh dialect to describe a passage too significant for conventional verse.

Maybe the direction of Justin Vernon’s journey as captured in For Emma is not that important. I wonder if what matters more is his ability to create word and sound for our shared uncommon experiences. At a Bon Iver concert in Chicago a few weeks ago, Vernon repeatedly thanked the small audience for our attention to his songs. He seemed to see our interest as a gift. To which I can only respond in kind.

“Thank you.”

 

From For Emma, check out Wolves (Act i and ii) courtesty of La Blogotheque.

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