Put Your Ghost To Rest
Kevin Devine
1. Brookly Boy
2. You're Trailing Yourself
3. Just Stay
4. You'll Only End Up Joining Them
5. Billion Bees
6. Less Yesterday, More Today
7. Like Cursing Kids
8. Go Haunt Someone Else
9. The Burning City Smoke
10. Me & My Friends
11. Trouble
12. Heaven Bound and Glory Be
Put Your Ghost To Rest Ghost
is 27-year-old Kevin Devine’s first album for new singer/songwriter label
Fruitcake following three widely-acclaimed albums on American independent
labels - Circle Gets the Square (2001), Make the Clocks Move (2003),
and Split The Country, Split The Street (2005). These twelve songs,
produced by Rob Schnapf (Elliott Smith, Beck, The Vines) and featuring Devine’s
friends and colleagues known as the Goddamn Band, represent the culmination of
several different strains in his musical upbringing, ranging from his love of
Pavement to Bob Dylan; Patsy Cline and Sonic Youth.
“I used to play in a band called Miracle of ‘86, a Replacements-ish, kind of
screamy rock thing,” he says. “And I dug it, but I was also writing these
folkie songs that weren’t really going to fly in that band, so I started to
make this other thing. And both of them were doing well, and that was a really
cool period of time. Split the Country was done after the band broke up,
like the hangover from that. It was more bi-polar – aggressive rock songs with
fuller instrumentation, but also songs with violins and glockenspiel or just a
guy with a guitar. Now this record feels like all of that smashed together, but
all built around songs written on an acoustic guitar, and it seems to flow in a
more cohesive way.”
Following a break-through performance at the CMJ music festival, Devine began
the process of recording an album with more time to work, a bigger budget, and
an outside producer. Not just any outside producer, either. “I’m a huge fan of
a lot of the stuff Rob has worked on,” says Devine. “I mean, Elliott Smith - a
really brilliant, gifted, singular voice who changed the way I look at writing
music profoundly. Working with Rob was amazing, one of those experiences that
I’ll be fifty before I’ll be able to fully process. I made a friend, and that’s
what you do this for.”
Devine realised he wanted to open the album with the confessional 'Brooklyn
Boy': “I was trying to figure out a way to be unflinching about some of the
experiences I had, friendships that dissolved and my role in that,” he says.
“After that, it moves almost chronologically to the last song, ‘Heaven Bound
& Glory Be,’ which is about someone looking around and taking stock and
being really afraid of what their government is up to - that if there’s a
breakdown of civility in government, it trickles down to everyday life. That
song ends with cautious optimism, trying to find something in the most basic
level of relating to one other person.”
In the last few years, Kevin Devine has toured extensively alongside a wide
range of artists, building up his own following in the process. This work
demonstrates the widespread appeal and breadth of his songs – the potential now
being focused and realized on Put Your Ghost to Rest. This stage
experience has also helped reshape some of his thinking: “Coming up in the
hardcore scene in Staten Island, where I grew up, we always cultivated a real
us-against-them thing and I’ve learned that’s really narrow and defeatist. I
learned that I can go and play with these different kinds of people - with
Corinne Bailey Rae, Tom McCrae or Cursive and Bright Eyes - and I’m lucky I can
do that. You just do your thing, present yourself your way, and you’ll be
fine.”
Release Date:
