"Digital Ash in a Digital Urn" is one of two albums recently released simultaneously by Bright Eyes, a vehicle for the low key musings of singer-songwriter, artiste generale Connor Oberst.
It is unnecessary to delve too deeply into the much discussed differences between this and its sister album, "I'm Wide Awake It's Morning," (henceforth IWAIM) which fitted more securely into the alt-folk acoustic model that has created a loyal fan base for Bright Eyes.
In many ways, their is a strong continuity with his former work; highly nuanced rhythm and melody within a simple structure, lyrics that are abstract in a sense that they reveal ideas and feelings rather than disguise meaning and vocals that have the ability to express deep emotion but are cranked up sparingly so maintaining their integrity. These hallmarks of Oberst's work make this an album that will still appeal to his loyal fan base, (although of course he was smart enough to sweeten the pill with "IWAIM").
However, the use of drum machines, unsyncopated beats, and highly processed and synthetic sound effects, that mark a break from his previous work, give this album a more refined almost futuristic style that will appeal to people who find pared down acoustic musings a little too raw to digest.
While being an intelligent commercial move this is also a social service; singer-songwriters almost always have the most thought provoking lyrics and it is commendable that Oberst is bringing his brand to a generation succoured on electronica.
This has become a bit of a eulogy so to balance the books slightly; this will annoy die-hards but Oberst's voice can grate after continued listens (although not many artists can claim to avoid this). Moreover, the album maintains a level of consistent quality rather than displaying real stunners such as First Day of My Life from "IWAIM". However, all in all gold star to yound Connor and the artworks pretty too.
Sorry, also, songs "I Believe in Symmetry" and "Easy/Lucky/Free" are surprisingly unmentioned in previous reviews. Not to carp or anything, but they're good