Summer at Shatter Creek is the ultimate solo album. Not only has Craig Gurwich played every instrument and written and recorded every song on his debut, but the tunes themselves feel like they were composed in a room far removed from human traffic. You can practically smell the stale sweat socks.
That's not to suggest that this CD stinks. Rather, Gurwich -- a Kalamazoo native who now lives in the City of Angels -- has crafted a monument to monastic seclusion, an ethereal collection that seems to float out of the speakers. Partially, he accomplishes this effect via his voice, a hushed, multitracked falsetto that reaches such high notes you expect Gurwich to be wearing wings. (Sigur Rós and Jeff Buckley may use similar tactics, but Gurwich scores points for singing in a real language and for not being dead.) To further foster this spooky, insular vibe, Gurwich constructs a warm bed of piano, vibes, tambourine, vintage keyboards, and slow, elegant guitar to nestle into.
Naturally, any solo album worth its salt needs sad lyrics, and Summer at Shatter Creek delivers. "When you've got no one, there's no one to lose," Gurwich whispers during "Driving Through Texas." But instead of coming off horribly depressed, he wears his isolation as if it were a fur coat -- thick, fuzzy, and worth strutting around in. Whether he's cruising empty city streets or telling himself he doesn't miss his ex, Gurwich raises his solitude to the level of outright beauty. After all, as he sings on "Home for the Holidays," "Everybody loves you when you're down." -- SF Weekly
Thee More Shallows: Numerous bands have mined the brooding alt-rock seam that was established by the likes of Sparklehorse and Grandaddy, but the San Franciscan duo Dee Kesler and Tadas Kisielius are worthy of their company. Their debut album has more abstract, drifting intentions than it's peers, but compensates for a lack of pointed hooks with a fog of pensive, blue-note beauty - instruments almost sound stroked, not played. There are songs nevertheless, especially I Do So Have a Sense of Humor, that not only crystalise that fuzzy, 3am state of mind, but send you home on an exquisite cushion of strings. -Martin Aston, The Times, June 15, 2002
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