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The Doctor Came At Dawn

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Download links and information about The Doctor Came At Dawn by Smog. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 38:52 minutes.

Artist: Smog
Release date: 1996
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist
Tracks: 10
Duration: 38:52
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Buy on Songswave €1.09

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. You Moved In 4:34
2. Somewhere In the Night 2:10
3. Lize 5:58
4. Spread Your Bloody Wings 3:27
5. Carmelite Light 0:42
6. Everything You Touch Becomes a Crutch 2:34
7. All Your Women Things 6:47
8. Whistling Teapot - Rag 3:39
9. Four Hearts In a Can 4:12
10. Hangman Blues 4:49

Details

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Documenting romantic decay and deception with typically unflinching honesty, Bill Callahan recounts every painful detail of falling in and out of love over the course of The Doctor Came at Dawn. "You Moved In" recalls an affair's desperate, obsessive beginnings with grim humor: "You could have done better, but oh well." The song's eerie, foreboding strings and piano arrangement, as well as Callahan's deadpan vocals, give fair warning that The Doctor Came at Dawn's intimate sound hits close to home. The deadly aim of "Lize," a duet between Callahan and his sometime creative and romantic partner Cindy Dall, spares no one: "You don't make lies like you used to," they sing in near-unison, creating the tense, charged atmosphere of a stifled argument. As always, Smog walks the fine line between self-deprecation and self-parody; "Somewhere in the Night"'s handclaps and acoustic strumming make it sound like a rousing, inspirational folk song — except for the sneer embedded in Callahan's voice as he urges his beloved to devote herself to someone else. But The Doctor Came at Dawn is at its best when Callahan's sense of empathy emerges on the remarkable "All Your Women Things." Initially, it seems like a fetishistic ballad about keeping an ex-lover's things, but with deeper listening, it reveals itself as a very sincere (albeit unnerving) love song, praising his lover's different aspects: "How could I ignore your hardness, your softness, and your mercy?" Lyrically and emotionally complex, the song exemplifies the depth of Smog's songwriting. The album is also musically deep, with understated guitar, piano, and string arrangements that give the rich vocals and lyrics added impact. It might be Smog's darkest collection of songs, but it's also among Callahan's most mature and rewarding.