The unbearable lightness of being
Eight albums in, Denison Witmer’s best record is 2003’s Recovered. It featured reverent covers of acknowledged classics from Jackson Browne, Leonard Cohen and Alex Chilton: tough competition, to be sure. But Carry the Weight, the latest installment in his ongoing mopefest, too often accentuates the differences between those morose masters and this young man. Witmer sings about “the weight,” but most of his songs seem feather light.
To his credit, Witmer has mastered the brooding, introspective,
early-’70s singer/songwriter template, and from a musical and
production standpoint, his earnest songs compare favorably to those of
Browne and his confessional descendants. “From Here On Out” is an
acoustic-guitar- and piano-dominated ballad that could’ve been ripped
from Browne’s songbook circa For Everyman, while “Song of
Songs” employs the hushed singing and lovely counterpoint vocals that
often characterize Sufjan Stevens’ folkier compositions.
The lyrics, though, are another story. Carry the Weight’s title
track—a pretty waltz that’s reprised at album’s end with some lovely
harmony vocals from Rosie Thomas—carries all the emotional resonance of
a Coca-Cola commercial. “Carry the weight of your brother / Carry the
weight of your sister,” Witmer sings in this vacuous neo-hippie anthem.
“If You Are The Writer,” a sprightly tune with the best melodic hook on
the album, is undermined by the kind of preciousness last seen on
puppy-and-kitty posters: “If you are the water I am the waves / If you
are the writer I am the page.” Other times, Witmer simply tries too
hard, as on the earnestly poetic “One More Day,” which features the
head-scratching anatomical metaphor “patches on the elbows of my eyes.”
It’s hard to know whether to call a tailor or an ophthalmologist.
Near the end of the album, Witmer gets it right: the fragile music and
the pensive, finely realized lyrical details of “Chesapeake Watershed”
combining for a perfect snapshot of rootlessness and ennui. But, in
spite of the clear debt his music owes to Browne, Witmer has yet to
approach the literate and emotionally charged grandeur of Browne’s best
work. He’s not running on empty, but the tank isn’t full.
Listen to Denison Witmer's "Life Before Aesthetics" from Carry the Weight on his MySpace page.


Okay, I had you until you started talking about the lyrics.
Is our world so screwed that when someone talks about meaningful community, you think Coca-Cola? I don't hear a note of artificial sweetener in the mix on this one, especially the acoustic cut. It's not Denison's fault you've allowed TV to destroy your faith in community.
Pathetic review here, but a great album. Have a listen- it offers some really great images, and a new set of great tunes.
I agree with the above review. I just posted this same thing in the comments section of the Paste interview with Denison:
I love how candid Denison is in this interview. He has been a favorite of mine for years. He is horribly underrated. Carry The Weight is a fantastic album. I appreciate his willingness to mix things up from record to record. Hearing him further explain Carry The Weight here, I have to say that your review of his album record is a joke. The reviewer did not understand where Denison is/has been coming from all of the years he has been making music. It came off as if he had some chip on his shoulder regarding Denison as a person. I thought it was mean and shotty journalism. I am disappointed that terrible review made it past the editors of Paste and into print.
Jesus, people, it's a review, not investigative journalism!
"Shoddy journalism"?
You're free to think the reviewer's opinion sucks, but don't attack it for being something it's not.
I enjoyed the review (although I think "patches on the elbows of my eyes" is a good metaphor, actually).