Siren Records McHenry
3902 Main Street
McHenry, Illinois 60050
815-347-8363
SUMMER HOURS
MONDAY CLOSED
TUESDAY CLOSED
WEDNESDAY 11-6pm
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 4-8pm SOMETIMES LATER
SATURDAY 11-6
Sunday 11AM-4PM
Artist:Son Volt
Format: CD New: Not in Stock Online call for in-store availability
Wish
Formats and Editions
DISC: 1
1. The Search
2. Carnival Blues
3. Methamphetamine
4. Bleed The Line
5. L Train
6. Phosphate Skin
7. The Picture
8. Beacon Soul
9. Underground Dream
10. Exurbia
11. Adrenaline And Heresy
12. Cops & Robbers
13. Bonus Track
14. Say Hey
15. Blueprince Of War
DISC: 2
1. Action
2. Circadian Rhythm
3. Bicycle Hotel
4. Houdini Punches
5. Acetone Angels
6. Satellite
7. Automatic Society
8. Waking World
9. Highways And Cigarettes
10. Coltrane Free
11. Slow Hearse
More Info:
The Search Son Volt was founded in 1994 by Jay Farrar of New Orleans, Louisiana after the dissolution of the band Uncle Tupelo. Earnest, plainspoken and single-minded, Jay Farrar has amassed a sizable and distinctive body of work since coming on the radar with Uncle Tupelo in 1987. The Search, the fifth album by the St. Louis-based artist under the Son Volt nameplate, takes Farrar's signature juxtapositions of the arcane and the modern to provocative extremes, contrasting the blue highways of a disappearing cultural landscape with a perilous world in which the center no longer holds - a world of information overload, of clueless leaders carrying out sinister agendas, of "Hurricanes in December - earthquakes in the heartland/Bad air index on a flashing warning sign," as the artist sings ruefully on "The Picture." The Search's 14 songs locate and vividly portray the prevailing modes of the human condition in the first decade of the 21st century: cynicism ("Beacon Soul"), reflection ("The Search"), restlessness ("L Train," "Highways and Cigarettes"), yearning ("Adrenaline and Heresy"), paranoia ("Automatic Society"), despair ("Methamphetamine") and conditional hopefulness ("Underground Dream," "Phosphate Skin"). By turns melancholy and exhilarating, the album further cements Farrar's status as one of rock's most eloquent chroniclers of contemporary existence.