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self titled - Mont de Sundua
Chris Gardner
2007-06-25

self titled - Mont de Sundua, Removador Records
At Dawn/Tennessee Fire Demos - My Morning Jacket, Darla Records 156

You can pretty safely file the both of these under "For Completists Only." Mont de Sundua (or Month of Sundays) was Jim James' band before he formed the Jacketeers, and the trio's occasionally crunchy but often plodding full-length languished on a shelf for nearly ten years for good reason. This will be a great boon to those fans from back in the day still reveling in their beer-soaked memories, but to the rest of us it just sounds like any group of friends rawkin' out in the garage. While there's nothing wrong with rawkin' in the garage, there's little truly right about this record either, little to recommend it above your own favorite bar-rockin' local band of this day or of your own beer-soaked days of yore.

You can catch a little whiff of the chiming/stomping/good-rockin' fun you get from My Morning Jacket these days, but either the proportions are off or the brew is not yet fermented. For the record, you might also catch a whiff of the decomposing corpse of grunge that lingered in the air when this record was recorded in 1998. Pushed by James' own label, Removador, this is likely a labor of love geared for a select few, and those few should love it.

Much of the Demos package will be familiar to early-birds and thieves, as more than half of it was released as a bonus disc with early runs of the stellar At Dawn. The ten At Dawn takes feature James multi-tracking himself on a four-track. The demos are rough, unmixed, and raw, and what immediately strikes you is how little these songs lose in their original incarnations. While much of that is a tribute to James' strength as a songwriter, the band doesn't bring a whole lot to the table when they flesh out his bare-boned songs. As these demos make resoundingly clear (and as most MMJ fans already knew), the band's first two records could just as easily be billed as the Jim James Band. The fault lies on both sides of course.

The leap the band made with Z seems to me now a function of the steady growth of a songwriter who has learned to write for a band rather than for himself alone. While there is little in the completed tracks of At Dawn that could not be easily predicted by listening to the demos, the same can't be said for much of It Still Moves or almost all of Z. Sure "Golden" doesn't gain much by the full-band treatment, but a just-Jim version of "One Big Holiday," "Wordless Chorus," or "Off the Record" would be little more than a shadow of its ultimate form. In this package, you get five Tennessee Fire cuts (three with a full band) and a few live takes off radio and the like (including a nice "War Begun"), but the best part of the Demos package isn't what it is but what it proves. It proves that Jim James is a helluva songwriter who has learned with each record to be a better and better band-leader.

And that's why these are for completists only. There is nothing earth-shattering here, nothing you're going to immediately throw on a playlist of email to a friend, but the cuts are still revelatory. The greater virtue of this pair of records is that they flesh out the arc of Jim James' career by giving shape to his growth, and anything that proves that At Dawn, brilliant as it is, is the work of a songwriter who hasn't yet begun to mature is worth releasing.

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