Danielson Ships
When Ships, Daniel Smith's latest album as Danielson, is released on May 6, Iit will probably reignite the currently dormant and altogether dumb-but-necessary "debate" over Christian-themed indie rock, well-laid out here. I have three reasons for thinking this. First, Smith's music recorded as Danielson, Br. Danielson, Danielson Familie, etc., can claim its own unique musico-religious (or religio-musical?) territory, somewhere between the poles of Animal Collective's woodland howling and Sufjan Stevens' naive elementary school pageant rockenspiel. Where Stevens is a soft-voiced Sunday School teacher who illustrates bible stories on weekends, Smith is a , but less polished and pretty backwoods revivalist, equally touched by the spirit and disposed to album-length celebrations of family and community.Second, Ships is the best work that Smith's ever been involved with, and it will (and should) receive a good deal of attention on this count. The album as a whole is being pitched as the culmination of twelve years of music-making, and was no doubt aided by the assistance of Deerhoof, Why?, Serena Maneesh and Sufjan Stevens, who also appears in this clip from the forthcoming documentary Danielson: A Family Movie (or, Make a Joyful Noise Here) (mov). And that's my third reason.