
Iron & Wine
Beast Epic
(Sub Pop)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Sam Beamโs return to veteran indie label Sub Pop after five years with major label Nonesuch seems significant. When Beam introduced himself as Iron & Wine on the lo-fi-recorded folk pluck-alongs of 2002โs The Creek Drank The Cradle, he proved that all you need to make a great song is a few good chords and a warmly melodic voice. Yet with albums like 2013โs Ghost On Ghost, Beam strayed far from that stripped-down approach by adding strings, โ70s soft-rock production and a lushness that sounded dramatically different, even if the songs at their core were just as warm and nourishing.
Beast Epic, Beamโs fourth for Sub Pop and sixth overall, is a happy midpoint between his starkest, simplest recordings and his more indulgent ones. Beam keeps to simpler arrangements on Beast Epic. The days of him simply finger-picking an acoustic guitar alone are well behind him, but a track like โThomas County Lawโ only features slightly more instrumentation: light taps of percussion, a sparse bassline and gentle piano accompaniment. Itโs the most intimate heโs sounded in years.
The albumโs relative spaciousness is neither shocking nor unexpected. Beam wears this comfortable, lived-in approach well, delivering songs that maintain the prettiness and emotional impact of past records while offering the illusion of sitting in on a loose session between veteran session players. โCall It Dreamingโ is just such an example, a big-hearted hymn about making the most of our short-term flesh-and-bone rentals. Thereโs a knowing sense of hurt, yet he delivers it with a smile.
Everything about Beast Epic feels true to Iron & Wine. Beam neither abandons his greater ambitions nor overindulges. Heโs making a return trip to his roots, offering a gentle reminder of his early recordsโ simple beauty while allowing himself the freedom to build.
