We Shall All Be Healed | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | February 3, 2004 | |||
Studio | Bear Creek, Woodinville, Washington | |||
Genre | Folk rock | |||
Length | 44:45 | |||
Label | 4AD | |||
Producer | ||||
The Mountain Goats chronology | ||||
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We Shall All Be Healed is the eighth studio album by The Mountain Goats. The album focuses on semi-fictional accounts of band leader John Darnielle's years as a teenager, particularly his friends' and acquaintances' experiences in California and in Portland, Oregon, as methamphetamine addicts. As The Mountain Goats' official website puts it: "All of the songs on We Shall All Be Healed are based on people John used to know. Most of them are probably dead or in jail by now." Like Tallahassee, but unlike the rest of Darnielle's repertoire up to its release, We Shall All Be Healed was recorded with a full band in a recording studio, and produced by John Vanderslice, as opposed to The Mountain Goats' previous practice of recording at home on a boom box with, at most, one or two backup vocalists or a bassist. "Palmcorder Yajna" (the primary single), when played in concert, is often played with the backing of members of one or more of the opening acts on tour with The Mountain Goats. The song "Cotton" was featured in an episode of the television series Weeds.
One of the provisional titles for the album was New Age Music Will Save Your Wretched Soul.[1]