Daily Download: "Ain't No Jesus in Here," Sweet Billy Pilgrim

"Ain't No Jesus in Here"

I just have a handful of MP3s to go on, but they make it perfectly clear that newcomer British band Sweet Billy Pilgrim's debut full-length, "We Just Did What Happened and No One Came," is something very special. The songs are sung in a weak and whispery voice that sounds undistinguished but somehow captivates, in part because the songs are written so delicately and so well, and because the voice is surrounded by silvery, beautifully detailed production, with various sounds -- both familiar and not -- shifting dreamily in and out of focus. "Ain't No Jesus in Here" is a lazy-day-smudged country song with a terrific opening line ("This here's no heart of darkness/It ain't no heart of gold"), "Forget to Breathe" is an introverted, slightly twisted parlor version of Coldplay-style stadium balladry, and my allegiance has been shifting between them, so definitely download both. Also available for download is the lovely "Experience," hazy and a little bit sinister, and "God in the Details," which is a little bit too explicitly Tom Waits-y for me. Many thanks to Sixeyes for leading me to this band.

-- T.B.

In the news

Loading...

Currently in Salon

  • From Balloon Boy to Sarah Palin's death panels, the media chased a lot of hoaxes in 2009 and called them news
  • Special ho-ho-ho-infused, not-quite-gift-guide edition: MST3K, Wenders, film noir, wine snobs and more
  • From cash-strapped polygamists to rogue lawn mowers at Sterling Cooper, the greatest shows dared to provoke
  • Grab a partner. You have some cooking to do. Plus: Last week's winners
  • At least, I was until now. Because in my circle, nothing is more embarrassing than being religious
  • Sex scandals, swine flu, tea parties, Michele Bachmann -- and that's just the first half of 2009
  • What the Democrats can learn from the Republicans about managing the ménage à trois within the party
  • Jacob Hacker breaks with fellow progressives, comes out in favor of the Senate's proposal
  • She never became Hollywood's It girl, but she was as daffy and heartbreaking as her A-list contemporaries
  • An extraordinary new memoir by a college jock whose brain began to bleed

Other News