Thursday 24 April 2008

David Karsten Daniels - Fear Of Flying

Release Date: 28/04/08
Label: FatCat

This album is desperately moving. Approach with caution if your heart is made of anything less than steel.

Fear of Flying is a collection of emotive songs written about David’s family members spiraling in to old age, and ultimately their mortality, his feelings on death, life and faith. Whilst reflecting on his own fear of everlasting darkness he ponders on everybody’s thoughts and feelings. How do you feel about death? What will you do? Whilst being reassuring he also expresses a lack of sympathy towards other peoples fears. Possibly, this is cathartic.

Even the title “Fear of Flying” suggests that he has fears but it’s not actually that he has a fear of flying but a fear of the passage between being a land creature on earth to then fly into the sky, into heaven, into the unknown.

The music, at times, is bare - just a nylon strung guitar and his soothing voice. At others he is accompanied by distant organs, flutes and in the heightened moments there are grinding guitars, distorted drums, oboes and saxophones. All well arranged, so much so, it’s passable as pop, with an element of noise which never spirals out of control.

Daniel does make light humour out of his religion and death in “Oh, Heaven Isn't Real” by exclaiming that “heaven is lie / it’s just a little thing that's there to make you feel better”, which offers you a haven from the initial bruising. Also on “Everytime A Baby is Born” he asked the question “Do you cry / Everytime a baby is born?” then why cry when person dies. Suggesting that it’s one and the same thing and with that in mind its easier to cope. And in “Falling Down” he jokes whilst plummeting in mid-flight of a car crash how perfect an end it would be - being altogether “with my boys”.

The subject matters are strong and deep. But the impression I get is that he is saying that as much as we fear death we should embrace it. Smile in the face of adversity. Therefore, it is not all doom and gloom.?

The album concludes sweetly with the Lords Prayer being song over a chorus of crickets at moonlight. Gently caressing you, like a Mother's warm hug before lights out.

89/100

HMV / 7 Digital

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No label persuasion, just personal opinion.