I See A Darkness by Bonnie 'Prince' Billy

I See A Darkness

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy

1999

I See A Darkness is a Country album by Bonnie 'Prince' Billy, originally released in 1999. On Gatefold: 26 pressings tracked, owned by 8 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Country
  • Americana & Roots
  • sparse
  • brooding
  • groovy

About

<i>I See a Darkness</i> marked the debut of Will Oldham’s Bonnie “Prince” Billy nom de rock, which in the two decades since has become his primary moniker. Unceremonious in its sound, the album is a natural continuation of Oldham’s previous work as Palace Brothers and Palace Music—yet it was the most powerful and perfected realization of his songwriting to date. <i>I See a Darkness</i> was lauded by critics, fans, and, notably, many other artists; within a year of the album’s release, Johnny Cash would record a cover of the title track with Oldham singing backup, cementing his graduation from underground phenomenon to master of contemporary American songwriting. <i>Darkness</i> fused do-it-yourself indie rock and the American country folk-blues idiom with lyrics that are as spiritually raw as they are wry, all in a voice that was ragged, boyish, and tremulous. Drawing from the vintage work of Merle Haggard, The Louvin Brothers, and modern R&B, the songs are mordant (“I See a Darkness”), eerie, corporeal, and sensual (“The scars of last year’s storm/Rest like maggots on my arm,” he sings on “A Minor Place”). The recurring, doomy theme of death’s inevitability is woven with lighter scenes of earthly connection: professions of love, of brotherly bond, by an invitation to get under someone’s dress (“Death to Everyone”). For all of the anxiousness and fear he voices on <i>Darkness</i>, Oldham got indie-rock songwriting out of its own head and lowered it down into the rest of the body with lyrics that were sometimes comically ribald (the itemized “buttock” of “Nomadic Revery [All Around]”) or explicitly sexual (“Knockturne”). Within independent rock, <i>I See a Darkness</i> was a paradigm-shifting album, the <i>Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan</i> of its era, with Oldham’s peculiar and publicity-averse now-you-see-me-now-you-don’t persona making him nearly as enigmatic. Its impact on the sound and style of Oldham’s peers was both immediate (including Björk, Cat Power, Wilco) and lasting (Songs: Ohia, Iron & Wine, Bon Iver, Father John Misty), ushering in an era of albums that strived toward similarly unadorned production, casual eroticism, and visceral intensity.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. 1A Minor Place3:43
  2. 2Nomadic Revery (All Around)3:58
  3. 3I See A Darkness4:49
  4. 4Another Day Full Of Dread3:10
  5. 5Death To Everyone4:31
  6. 6Knockturne2:17
  7. 7Madeleine-Mary2:31
  8. 8Song For The New Breed3:23
  9. 9Today I Was An Evil One3:52
  10. 10Black3:45
  11. 11Raining In Darling1:54

Credits

Performers

8 collectors on Gatefold own this · 26 pressings tracked on Gatefold