Transnormal Skiperoo Jim White

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CD

  • Release Date: 03/04/2008
  • Original Release: 2007
  • Sales Rank: 61,056
  • Label: LUAKA BOP
  • UPC: 680899006927

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Transnormal Skiperoo

1LISTENA Town Called Amen 3:42
2LISTENBlindly We Go 3:09
3LISTENJailbird 5:44
4LISTENCrash into the Sun 4:30
5LISTENFruit of the Vine 7:43
6LISTENTake Me Away 4:26
7LISTENTurquoise House 3:20
8LISTENDiamonds to Coal 4:36
9LISTENCounting Numbers in the Air 5:19
10LISTENPlywood Superman 5:39
11LISTENPieces of Heaven 3:27
12LISTENIt's Been a Long Long Day / Jeff & Vida 3:51

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Jim White reached his 50th year while recording his fifth album, and it's a place that, ten years before, he thought he might never see. The quixotic fortunes of this ex-surfer, ex-Pentecostal, ex-fashion model, ex-taxi driver seemed arrayed against his ever growing older and raising a family of his own, but as White would tell you himself, life can be funny that way. The "transnormal skipperoo" is White's term for this karmically balanced state of affairs, and he's chosen to celebrate it in a very deliberate way, returning self-consciously to the record he made in 1997 in the depths of a depression after a devastating accident - (The Mysterious Tale of How I Shouted) Wrong Eyed Jesus!. From his happy rural home in the Georgia woods, White looks back on the humid panhandle blues and meth-tweaked folk that informed his just-left-of-wacko songwriting. Fans will be happy to know that it's a sonic leap easily made by White, who plugs back into those scratchy guitars, electric pianos, drum loops, and plunking banjos with ease. Lyrically, though, it's a brand-new day -- and a great stride for White's songwriting. Once happily and fruitfully obsessed with murder ballads and freak songs, White challenges himself to look beyond these somewhat easy targets. "Diamonds to Coal" and "Crash into the Sun" in particular salute the tiny wonders of the transnormal, where White casts aside the eccentric subject matter to tackle the real improbabilities of maturity and happiness. Never fear, there are a few skeletons in the closet that White gleefully reanimates: "Fruit of the Vine" is a creepy drive-by down addiction's desperate streets, while "Take Me Away" offers an old-fashioned southern gothic tale of hereditary insanity that's just a metaphor away from White's own artistic struggle. With contributions from Ollabelle, Laura Viers, Tucker Martine, and others, this is yet another excellent album by the highly unlikely Jim White. Mark Schwartz, Barnes & Noble



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