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Devotion + Doubt
1997 studio album by Richard Buckner From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Devotion + Doubt (sometimes formatted as Devotion+Doubt) is the second studio album by Richard Buckner, and his first album released on a major label.[1] It was released on March 11, 1997 by MCA Records. Buckner recorded the album shortly after the end of his first marriage.[2]
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Critical reception
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Mark Deming of AllMusic wrote that it was "a significantly more ambitious and accomplished effort than [Buckner's 1994 debut album] Bloomed" and "a creative left turn that more than lived up to the promise of [Bloomed]".[3] Trouser Press' Erik Hage wrote that Devotion + Doubt was "...a gut-wrenching song cycle that deserves a place in the divorce-album hall-of-fame alongside Dylan's Blood on the Tracks".[10] Peter Blackstock of No Depression wrote that "It's the voice that brings Buckner's music to flesh; he is, above all else, a singer. It's a smooth, melodious croon, by nature, but imbued with such a warm, bittersweet darkness that the sound seems to ooze from the speakers in richly layered browntones with every careful cadence."[11] A review in SF Weekly praised the album's songs, saying that once you can read its lyric sheet, the previously fragmented lyrics cohere. The review said that once this becomes clear, the songs "...complete Devotion & Doubt's promise."[12]
Dan Kening of the Chicago Tribune was less favorable in his review of the album, writing, "Buckner saddles even his better songs, like "Lil' Wallet Picture" and "A Goodbye Rye," with such pretentious lyrics ("Once upon a blue thing or two/Eyes and sighs and a moon confused") that they sink under their own self-conscious weight."[5] Robert Christgau similarly mocked Buckner's lyrics, writing in The Village Voice, "he has just the sensitive baritone to make awful seem awful romantic to sad sacks and the women who love them."[9]
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Track listing
All tracks are written by Richard Buckner.
Personnel
- Richard Buckner – primary artist, vocals, arrangements
- Greg Calbi – mastering
- J. D. Foster – production
- Michael Hall – arrangements
- Craig Schumacher – engineering
Guest artists
References
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