Kevin Coyne - Room Full of Fools (2000)

Artist: Kevin Coyne
Title: Room Full of Fools
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Ruf Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Alt Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 55:08
Total Size: 158/392 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Room Full of Fools
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: Ruf Records
Genre: Folk Rock, Alt Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 55:08
Total Size: 158/392 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview

Tracklist:
01. Sugar Turning Sour
02. I'm Wild
03. More Than Enough
04. God Watches
05. Whispering Desert
06. Candelight
07. Forgive Me
08. The Einstein Song
09. Sugar Sugar Samba
10. Celestial Bride
11. Take Your Pain Away
12. Precious
13. Speak To Me
14. But I Love You
15. I Can't Make It
16. Room Full Of Fools
Line-up:
Bass – Robert Coyne
Drums – Steve Smith, Werner Steinhauser
Guitar – Kevin Coyne, Robert Coyne
Keyboards – Kevin Coyne, Robert Coyne
Vocals – Kevin Coyne
The result of his first recording sessions in the U.S., Room Full of Fools offers more of what we've come to expect from Coyne: anguished, sometimes verging-on-deranged narratives of life's underside. This is territory that's been mined far more in the 1980s and 1990s than it was when Coyne came to prominence in the 1970s, so you could view this as a statement from an elder statesman of the style, or something that's bound to sound less fresh than it did earlier in his career. Coyne does retain his ability to convey angst with more sincerity and humor, albeit very dark humor, than most such practitioners. It's harder-rocking than usual, which works to its disadvantage more often than not; the full blues-rock arrangements just sound too conventional in juxtaposition with Coyne's far from ordinary voice and lyrics. When he slows it down for something more acoustic and even bluesier, or the swirling organ comes more to the fore, his restrained rantings find a more suitable context. Subject-wise, Coyne casts his net over material that's run-of-the-mill for him, but not to be found in the work of many popular music singers: uncertain mental stability, incorrigible boys, and the mundane irritations of not-so-happy lives. That's balanced by some warped optimism and romantic longing, like a man who's down for a count but keeps managing to rise for more battering. It's idiosyncratic and heartfelt stuff, but apt to make any listener caught in the wrong mood feel as irritated and agitated as the mental landscape of his compositions.