EELS

End Times

2010-01-19

After only a few short months since their last release, the Eels are back with their eighth studio album with a large focus on the "End Times" - the aptly named title. Here, the focus isn't on the end of the world per say, but on the end of singer/songwriter Mark Oliver Everett's marriage. Most, if not all of the songs deal with this in one way or another - some more explicitly than others. It's as if Everett has opened up his journal for everyone to read only instead of reading it he turns them into songs and he sings them for us. The opener, "The Beginning," reflects on past circumstances and younger days when "everything was beautiful and free." "In My Younger Days," continues the lament with an element of anger surfacing over losing someone he still wants back. The songs "Mansions of Los Feliz" and the title track "End Times," diverts from personal issues ever so slightly and focuses on the larger and increasingly hostile world that finds itself (from Everett's point of view) teetering on the verge of self-destruction. In all its simplicity, "A Line in the Dirt" is one of the better sounding songs her with Everett's voice paired with a piano to offer another sad take on the trek called "life." Perhaps the best song here is "Unhinged" - one of only a couple of songs that has an upbeat edge to it. Sadly, five of the songs with a sound that would normally garner a lot of play and attention (Gone Man, Paradise Blues, Nowadays, Little Bird and On My Feet) are unplayable due to the lyrical content. Nevertheless, they're worth checking out on your own if you've got the time and the Eels are worth your attention. Overall, this effort from Eels is a heartfelt memoir that may work for some but might just be a little too sad for most. ~Reviewed by Jeff Bouma

Quick Links:

More reviews tagged #Folk

  • reviewed 07/2017

    John Dennis
    Second Wind

  • reviewed 11/2006

    COWBOY JUNKIES
    Long Journey Home

  • reviewed 10/2003

    Natalie Merchant
    The House Carpenter's DaughterThe House Carpenter's Daughter

  • reviewed 01/2007

    Marshall Rhodes
    Marshall Rhodes

  • reviewed 02/2005

    Holly Williams
    The Ones We Never Knew

  • reviewed 04/2006

    Rachel Sage
    The Blistering Sun

Compiled by the WYCE Journalism Club

The opinions expressed in these reviews are those of the individual volunteers that submitted the article and do not necessarily reflect the views of WYCE or GRCMC; nor its staff, donors, or affiliates.