Beast Epic
"I must confess that Iāve always shied away from album introductions citing the usual "dancing to architecture" cop out. Speaking to their own work is uncomfortable for many artists, but Iāve made a new album called Beast Epic which is important to me and I wanted to take a moment to talk about why. Iāve been releasing music for about fifteen years now and I feel very blessed to have put out five other full lengths, many EPs and singles, a few collaborations with people much more talented than myself, and made contributions to numerous movie scores and soundtracks. This is my sixth collection of new Iron & Wine material and Iām happy to say that itās my fourth for Sub Pop Records.
"Itās a warm and serendipitous time to be reuniting with my Seattle friends because I feel thereās a certain kinship between this new collection of songs and my earliest material, which Sub Pop was kind enough to release.
āI have been and always will be fascinated by the way time asserts itself on our bodies and our hearts. The ferris wheel keeps spinning and weāre constantly approaching, leaving or returning to something totally unexpected or startlingly familiar. The rite of passage is an image I've returned to often because I feel weāre all constantly in some stage of transition. Ā Beast Epic is saturated with this idea but in a different way simply because each time I return to the theme Iāve collected new experiences to draw from. Where the older songs painted a picture of youth moving wide-eyed into adulthoodās violent pleasures and disappointments, this collection speaks to the beauty and pain of growing up after youāve already grown up. For me, that experience has been more generous in its gifts and darker in its tragedies.
Ā
āThe sound of Beast Epic harks back to previous work, in a way, as well. By employing the old discipline of recording everything live and doing minimal overdubbing, I feel like it wears both its achievements and its imperfections on its sleeve. Over the years, Iāve enjoyed experimenting with different genres, sonics and songwriting styles and all that traveled distance is evident in the feel and the arrangements here, but the muscles seemed to have relaxed and been allowed to effortlessly do what they do best (read full artist statement over here).āĀ
Ā - Sam Beam
Beast Epic was written and produced by Sam Beam. It was recorded and engineered by Tom Schick at the Loft in Chicago in July 2016 and January 2017, and mastered by Richard Dodd in Nashville, Tennessee. The musicians who played on the album include longtime Iron & Wine collaborators Rob Burger (keys), Joe Adamik (percussion, drums), and Jim Becker (guitar, banjo, violin, mandolin), along with bassist Sebastian Steinberg (Soul Coughing and Fiona Apple), and Chicagoan Teddy Rankin Parker (cello).
The Deluxe 2xLP version of Beast Epic isĀ on red & blue vinyl with alternate artwork, two bonus tracks from theĀ Beast EpicĀ recording sessions and three home-recorded demos, and has an etching on side D. The 5 bonus tracks are also included in the digital download that comes with this deluxe 2xLP edition. The bonus tracks are: 1. Hearts Walk Anywhere; 2. Kicking the Old Rain; 3. About a Bruise (demo); 4. Claim a Ghost (demo); 5. Summer Clouds (demo).
Original: $7.20
-65%$7.20
$2.52



Description
"I must confess that Iāve always shied away from album introductions citing the usual "dancing to architecture" cop out. Speaking to their own work is uncomfortable for many artists, but Iāve made a new album called Beast Epic which is important to me and I wanted to take a moment to talk about why. Iāve been releasing music for about fifteen years now and I feel very blessed to have put out five other full lengths, many EPs and singles, a few collaborations with people much more talented than myself, and made contributions to numerous movie scores and soundtracks. This is my sixth collection of new Iron & Wine material and Iām happy to say that itās my fourth for Sub Pop Records.
"Itās a warm and serendipitous time to be reuniting with my Seattle friends because I feel thereās a certain kinship between this new collection of songs and my earliest material, which Sub Pop was kind enough to release.
āI have been and always will be fascinated by the way time asserts itself on our bodies and our hearts. The ferris wheel keeps spinning and weāre constantly approaching, leaving or returning to something totally unexpected or startlingly familiar. The rite of passage is an image I've returned to often because I feel weāre all constantly in some stage of transition. Ā Beast Epic is saturated with this idea but in a different way simply because each time I return to the theme Iāve collected new experiences to draw from. Where the older songs painted a picture of youth moving wide-eyed into adulthoodās violent pleasures and disappointments, this collection speaks to the beauty and pain of growing up after youāve already grown up. For me, that experience has been more generous in its gifts and darker in its tragedies.
Ā
āThe sound of Beast Epic harks back to previous work, in a way, as well. By employing the old discipline of recording everything live and doing minimal overdubbing, I feel like it wears both its achievements and its imperfections on its sleeve. Over the years, Iāve enjoyed experimenting with different genres, sonics and songwriting styles and all that traveled distance is evident in the feel and the arrangements here, but the muscles seemed to have relaxed and been allowed to effortlessly do what they do best (read full artist statement over here).āĀ
Ā - Sam Beam
Beast Epic was written and produced by Sam Beam. It was recorded and engineered by Tom Schick at the Loft in Chicago in July 2016 and January 2017, and mastered by Richard Dodd in Nashville, Tennessee. The musicians who played on the album include longtime Iron & Wine collaborators Rob Burger (keys), Joe Adamik (percussion, drums), and Jim Becker (guitar, banjo, violin, mandolin), along with bassist Sebastian Steinberg (Soul Coughing and Fiona Apple), and Chicagoan Teddy Rankin Parker (cello).
The Deluxe 2xLP version of Beast Epic isĀ on red & blue vinyl with alternate artwork, two bonus tracks from theĀ Beast EpicĀ recording sessions and three home-recorded demos, and has an etching on side D. The 5 bonus tracks are also included in the digital download that comes with this deluxe 2xLP edition. The bonus tracks are: 1. Hearts Walk Anywhere; 2. Kicking the Old Rain; 3. About a Bruise (demo); 4. Claim a Ghost (demo); 5. Summer Clouds (demo).













