If you love performers with notable voices, you cannot complain about the noughties: this decade has so far seen the emergence of talented singers such as ANTONY HEGARTY, BABY DEE, PATRICK WOLF, SCOTT MATTHEW, CARLA BOZULICH...
Now add DM STITH to the list, for the N.Y. songwriter's début album is one of the big surprises of 2009. Just press PLAY and you will be enveloped by the tense, mysterious atmosphere of this record. HEAVY GHOST works as a whole: there are barely a few seconds' pause between the songs, the mood shifting around a bluesy folk-gospel template flecked by pianos à la SATIE, horns, violas and waves of choirs, all executed and mastered by Mr Stith's voice. And what a voice, indeed: mix NINA SIMONE's ballad style, NICK DRAKE, BRYAN FERRY, hints of JEFF BUCKLEY and you will have more than the sum of these parts, as is always the case with great vocalists.
The only fault that can be found with this cd is that the lyrics are not included (but a six-page booklet of images is); a real pity because DM STITH is not (due to his vocal style) the most intelligible singer in popular music. What can be gleaned from the lyrics, though, shows that the man has a way with words too. Introspective but tense, tenderly desperate and sensuous, these lyrics deal with obsessions, illuminations, damnation and (possibly) redemption. All classic themes, now ably refashioned by a new talent that we can only cherish and love. Body and soul.