Album Reviews

Adam Faucett: It Took The Shape Of A Bird

Adam Faucett
It Took the Shape of a Bird
(Last Chance)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

It wonโ€™t take long to understand that singer-songwriter Adam Faucett is not offering a good time. The first song, โ€œKing Snake,โ€ on his fifth album starts out with the lyrics โ€œDaddy died when I was 10/ Mama soon there followed/ My brother shipped to Africa โ€ฆโ€ in a first person narrative that tells a frightening tale of an abused orphan. The Benton, Arkansas-bred musician doesnโ€™t just sing these words, he howls, moans, preaches and wails them from the bottom of what seems like the fires of hell as drums, bass and guitar crash with insistent fury.

No, Faucett isnโ€™t here to make you smile. His songs donโ€™t follow standard structures โ€” there are few obvious choruses or melodies, none youโ€™ll want to sing along with โ€” and his circular guitar lines wander, some may say meander, around as he unloads parcels of poetic verse in an astoundingly powerful voice, bellowing words with ferocious intensity. Think Bono, 16 Horsepowerโ€™s David Eugene Edwards, Simple Mindsโ€™ Jim Kerr and Jim Morrison mashed together and youโ€™re close to the earth shaking force of Faucettโ€™s vocal attack.

There is also a decidedly serious sense about his topics, reflected in many one-word titles such as โ€œPearl,โ€ โ€œDust,โ€ โ€œAxe,โ€ and โ€œRain.โ€ Subtle strings on songs like โ€œAncient Chordโ€ add to Faucettโ€™s melancholy, often dark, gothic vibe. Even at a relatively compact 45 minutes, absorbing all 10 tracks in a single sitting is a major undertaking. Each selection reverberates with plentiful concepts delivered with unquestionable sincerity and passion. Itโ€™s better to digest them in smaller increments, pouring over the lyrics and getting lost in the musicโ€™s potency.ย 

Meanings are often difficult to unravel specifically with lyrics such as โ€œIโ€™ll be your radio/ Iโ€™ll be your head doctor/ Iโ€™ll be your sunny day/ Iโ€™ll be your rain.โ€ But Faucettโ€™s voice, minor key chords and overall shadowy sense pervades the majority of this disc giving it a particularly foreboding air thatโ€™s both engaging and slightly scary. Certainly, topics exploring what appear to be desperate impulses on the discโ€™s closing, stark, unaccompanied acoustic guitar strummed โ€œSober and Stoned,โ€ where he sings โ€œIf I let them talk me from this ledge/ It means I have climbed here for nothingโ€ are as riveting as they are disturbing.

Itโ€™s a brave, somewhat uncomfortable continuation from Faucettโ€™s previous work that was similarly thought-provoking and fiercely non-commercial. This is not music to be taken lightly, but for those ready to scrape the scabs and scrutinize the often unpleasant areas in Adam Faucettโ€™s survey of the human condition, It Took the Shape of a Bird is a challenge worth accepting.