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The Mountain Goats

Get Lonely

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By Aaron Ladage

Published on September 14, 2006

The Mountain Goats(4AD) Listening to Get Lonely, one thing is certain — Mountain Goats mainstay John Darnielle has finally received that shipment of Xanax he's been waiting for. Compared with his last three albums, which benefited greatly from the golden touch of indie wonder-producer John Vanderslice, Lonely is almost completely devoid of the sharp edges and biting soliloquies that made Darnielle's past work so painfully delectable. But, that's not necessarily a bad thing. Instead of the frantic acoustic strumming of We Shall All Be Healed, the confessions of abuse on The Sunset Tree or the bitter divorce tales of Tallahassee ("No Children" being, incidentally, the best divorce song ever recorded), Darnielle supplies the listener with almost everything that made him an underground icon in the first place: simple melodies and poignant storytelling. Lonely meanders through its 12 tracks like an afternoon canoe trip with no paddles, never really picking up speed but always heading in the right direction. It may be a stark departure from the past few years of his career, but Darnielle's latest release is the kind of catharsis that everyone — artist and audience — really needed. Aaron Ladage