Sufjan Stevens
     
   
Seven Swans


Track Listings
1 All the Trees of the Field Will Clap Their Hands (4:14)
2 Dress Looks Nice on You (2:32)
3 In the Devil's Territory (4:57)
4 To Be Alone With You (2:48)
5 Abraham (2:33)
6 Sister (6:00)
7 Size Too Small (3:04)
8 We Won't Need Legs to Stand (2:16)
9 Good Man Is Hard to Find (3:16)
10 He Woke Me Up Again (2:43)
11 Seven Swans (6:33)
12 Transfiguration (5:18)
 

Discography
The Avalanche:
Outtakes & Extras from the Illinoise album
(2006)
Come On Feel the....Illinoise (2005)
Seven Swans (2004) 
Greetings from Michigan: The Great Lakes State (2003)
Enjoy the Rabbit (2001)
A Sun Came(2000) 
 

   Grace Hotel
  
Overall rating: ++++      

 

 

Album Reviews


You've heard it before in magazine articles but quiet is indeed the new loud. Folk-rock artists such as Sufjan Stevens are getting more and more exposure. Even on the small Sounds Familyre label, Seven Swans is really touching many people. Sufjan is a magical songwriter and is definitely not new to the scene. Seven Swans was recorded with Danielson Famile main-man Daniel Smith. It proves to be a great choice, be it the familiarity Daniel has with Sufjan or vice versa, the production is one of the first things you notice on this gentle and primarily acoustic album. You tend to feel a reflective tone in Stevens songs. They are all quiet and mellow, sometimes just relying on Sufjan and gently plucked guitar. Even as that, songs like "Abraham" seem so much bigger than just the components making it up. The album opens up with symphonic sounds of "All The Trees of the Field Will Clap Their Hands", leading the way with a banjo, an instrument we hear quite a bit from on Seven Swans. We don't get to hear drums until "Sister" clicks on but even then it's an ever gentle pace. There are similarities between what Sufjan is doing here and Sam Beam's Iron and Wine project. I would like to suggest that the two do a split album in the future. Seven Swans is an accomplishment and an album that we will definitely see on some year-end lists.
(Sounds Familyre 2004)

-dennis Scanland

    

It was just about a week ago that I proclaimed to a friend that Sufjan Stevens was most likely my current favorite singer/songwriter under the age of 30. I then revised that statement to the age of under 40, and then I even went ahead and declared that Stevens might very well be my current favorite singer/songwriter flat out. I've had the fortune of following his progress from the start, and although that debut disc (A Sun Came) didn't exactly signal greatness, it was the stunning leaps and bounds that he made with his follow-up of Enjoy Your Rabbit that marked him as a musician I should keep my eye on.

After his stylistically varied first two CDs, I'm not sure that anyone could have predicted the wealth of treasures that was Greetings From Michigan: The Great Lake State. Over the course of 16 tracks and almost 70 minutes of music, Stevens tackled joy and loss and hope and hope and just about every other emotion with a grace that made it almost seem easy. Using a huge variety of instrumentation and writing tracks with both traditional and hardly-used timing signatures, it was a lovely ode to his home state and a glorious album in general.

Because of the dizzying scale of Michigan it seems logical to set up Seven Swans as possibly being an album full of cast-offs or b-sides from the same session, but in fact they were actually recorded before Michigan and only finished afterwards. On the first couple listens, I even fell prey to wanting the same sort of release, and it wasn't until I'd really settled in with the 12 tracks that they really began to sink in as deeply as they should. The main reason for this is most likely due to the more stripped-down instrumentation and arrangements, but once again Stevens shows he's a master of the word (he has a masters in creative writing) as well, with Seven Swans being an even more spiritual and personal release than its predecessor.

Although Seven Swans is less musically complex than his previous work, it does highlight his deft banjo playing and features the vocal harmonies of Elin and Megan Smith on many tracks. "All The Trees Of The Fields Will Clap Their Hands" opens the disc and builds gracefully, opening only with the vocals of Stevens and banjo before vocals by the two Smiths join along with a quiet piano and finally drums to punctuate the ending. "The Dress Looks Nice On You" opens with guitar and vocals, but moves through several gorgeous sections punctuated with banjo and organ.

As with Michigan, one could go through the entire album and highlight nearly every song. In fact, the only track that sticks out musically is "Sister," which features some dirty electric guitars that don't quite fall in place with the rest of the release (which is for the most part acoustic). A personal favorite track of mine is "A Good man Is Hard To Find," inspired by the short story of the same name by Flannery O Connor (my favorite writer). Stevens narrates the song from the the perspective of The Misfit, and as always makes the whole thing seem almost effortless. I'm still not sure whether this release is better than Greetings From Michigan: The Great Lake State, but in the end it doesn't really matter. Sufjan Stevens is a musician who seems to just be reaching his creative peak and shows no signs of slowing down.

Rating: 8.5

~Almostcool

 

Sufjan Stevens released his previous album only seven months ago. Spending years slowly experimenting with different styles (post-rock, electronic what have you), he'd finally found one that was a hit with Michigan, and so has immediately plopped out more of the same; Seven Swans is the full-priced expansion pack to the recent hit game, but unlike any Sims add-on, Seven Swans actually makes your game more enjoyable. This isn't more-of-the-same-actually-worse-for-being-the-same the same; this is more-of-the-same-still-great-great-very-good the same, and even having been rushed out in such a hurry, it meets up to its high expectations and even marginally surpasses its horribly likable predecessor.
 
It's not about a state, though. Those of you who were into Suffy solely for his militant Michiganderism will be sorely disappointed, but you are most likely the sort who don't count for much of anything. Seven Swans is composed of odes to love and family and, alarmingly often, God. The lyrics are as well-composed but ultimately unimportant as they ever were; the simple but multifaceted melodies and sincere delivery are the big selling points, and that point is magnified by Sufjan's increase in banjo showcasing - it was a gimmick that paid off wonderfully with Michigan, and does so again.
 
In "He Woke Me Up Again", Sufjan pulls off a better Phil Elvrum than Phil Elvrum's been able to do as of late, adding the banjo that we now see was missing from The Glow, pt 2. Despite their awkwardly religious lyrics ("He will take you / If you run, he will chase you / 'Cause he is the Lord", "Two men appeared / Moses and Elijah came", etc.), the title track and the following "Transfiguration" are the two highest high points - this album's "Oh Detroit, Lift Up Your Weary Head!" or "Say Yes to Michigan!", sort of - and bring the album to a magnificent close. The rest of the highest points are more similar to Michigan's "Holland" or "Romulus", affecting acoustic songs with half-whispered lyrics (and more banjo).
 
Essentially, if you liked Michigan, you are 100% guaranteed to enjoy this album roughly as much, due to its being more or less exactly the same. Play "All the Trees of the Field Will Clap Their Hands" versus "For the Widows in Paradise, For the Fatherless in Ypsilanti" and just try to tell the difference. The same or otherwise, though, Seven Swans is Stevens' best work yet. And word on the street is the next Michigan expansion pack will feature online multiplayer and let you have pets.

~Noah

 

    Sufjan Stevens (homepage)

 

Interviews

Pitchforkmedia

Adequacy.net