Mark Lanegan

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Mark Lanegan Band
Bubblegum
Release Date: 2004 08 10
Label: Beggars Banquet

With the Screaming Trees an increasingly distant memory and his brief tenure with Queens of the Stone Age seemingly over and done, Mark Lanegan appears to have well and truly become a solo artist, and while the dark and blues-shot introspections of Whiskey for the Holy Ghost and The Winding Sheet felt like a respite from Lanegan's usual musical diet of the time, Bubblegum sounds like an effort to fuse the nocturnal atmospherics of his solo work with the impressive brain/brawn ratio of his better-known bands. Credited to the Mark Lanegan Band (though there's no consistent set of musicians from track to track), Bubblegum is hardly short on the moody stuff, with Lanegan's nicotine-buffered pipes leading these songs though any number of empty streets and unhappy events, as on the jonesed-out road trip of "Strange Religion," the pained drift of "One Hundred Days," and the wasted longing of "Morning Glory Wine" -- notice a common theme yet? (Oh, and in case you were wondering, the album's title refers not to teen-centric pop music, but a line from his song "Bombed": "When I'm bombed, I stretch like bubblegum/And look too long straight at the morning sun.") But Lanegan was also of a mind to rock out a bit while making this album (or figured that his newer fans were expecting it of him), and with his QOTSA pals Josh Homme and Nick Oliveri helping out on a few cuts, he does indeed deliver the rock, most notably the clanking menace of "Methamphetamine Blues," the straightforward bash of "Sideways in Reverse," and the organ-driven ooze of "Hit the City" (the latter featuring Polly Jean Harvey in an inspired duet appearance). But while most guys making a solo album after a stint with a successful band create music that speaks of freedom and release, Bubblegum finds Lanegan digging ever deeper into the obsessions and appetites that drag him into the same corner every time. It sure doesn't sound like a life most of us would wish to lead, but it makes for damned compelling art, and the dank emotional caverns of Bubblegum offer some territory well worth exploring for the strong-willed. Mark Deming, All Music Guide

Tracks:
TitleComposerTime
1When Your Number Isn't UpLanegan3:01
2Hit the CityLanegan2:48
3Wedding DressLanegan3:07
4Methamphetamine BluesLanegan3:16
5One Hundred DaysLanegan4:36
6BombedLanegan1:08
7Strange ReligionLanegan4:07
8Sideways in ReverseLanegan2:46
9Come to MeLanegan3:45
10Like Little Willie JohnLanegan3:53
11Can't Come DownLanegan3:37
12Morning Glory WineLanegan4:27
13HeadLanegan3:04
14Driving Death Valley BluesLanegan2:48
15Out of NowhereLanegan2:43

Releases:
YearTypeLabel
2004CDBeggars Banquet
2004LPBeggars Banquet



Member Of:
Queens of the Stone Age
Screaming Trees
The Gutter Twins
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Similar Artists:
Dinosaur Jr.
Hayden
Pete Droge
Howe Gelb
Mad Season
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Influenced By:
Tom Waits
Neil Young
Jeffrey Lee Pierce
Huddie Ledbetter
Jim Morrison
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Followers:
Mad Season
Layne Staley
Days of the New
Kurt Cobain
Damien Jurado
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