Last time around,
Conor Oberst -- who for all intents and purposes, is
Bright Eyes -- shoved all of his interests into one long, overstuffed epic, but with the simultaneously
I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning and
Digital Ash in a Digital Urn, he separates the country-rock on the former and the messy modernistic indie rock on the latter, as if to counter the criticisms that he can't focus.
I'm Wide Awake is designed as a nakedly honest singer/songwriter album, somewhat inspired by the classics of the genre in the '70s -- he even recruits
Emmylou Harris for some harmonies, hoping that some of the
Gram Parsons' magic will rub off. Stripped of the careening, dramatic, arrangements of
Lifted,
Oberst's music seems simpler, and while his voice -- a quavering bleat that's halfway between
Feargal Sharkey and
the Dead Milkmen's Rodney Anonymous -- is an acquired taste; fans will find this to be his most direct album yet. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine