Max Knouse
Chimpmunk'd Away (Pre-order)
Cat. No. JB259
$ 15.00
DETAILS
TRACKS
Side A
- Mint and Tobacco
- Nook Salmon
- Chrysanthemum
- Chipmunk'd Away
- Beaverbrain/Kittyjesus
Side B
- Diane
- Clumsy Hunter
- Marijuana Is A Carpet
- Banana, Orange, and Something Else
RELEASE DATE
6/13/2025
• FIRST PRESSING ON "BRAMBLE YELLOW" VINYL
“Max Knouse’s ‘Chipmunk’d Away’ is organic, frightful, sexy as a spring thunderstorm rolling over a mountain. Music, narrative, vocal tone, guitar phrase are all forever new in his hands.” – Jolie Holland
Max Knouse’s voice feels like laughter that follows a well-loved joke. Only afterward, it dawns on you that you don’t fully understand the punchline. Or for that matter the set up. In fact, you’re not even sure what language the joke was told in.
What to make of such a laugh—inexplicable, delightful, surprising, seemingly nonsensical? And what to make his voice, at once comforting, beguiling, and just beyond the bounds, like a blues moan or a Mingus lick or some ancient guttural holler? It’s the kind of haunt that lingers long after the record fades, echoing back in your imagination, laden with cryptic possibilities and occulted meanings.
Chipmunk’d Away is his third album, following the ramshackle glories of 2016’s Dinasaur From Jensen and 2020’s Road Toad Ribet. Known for his sessions and live shows with artists like Califone, Jolie Holland, Adan Jodorowsky, Psychic Temple, Simon Joyner, Alex Dupree, and others, Knouse has established himself as an essential factor in the West Coast indie pop underground, brandishing guitar chops that mirror the rawness of his voice; he treats his instrument like a divining rod of spiritual tension and joyful racket, pushing and pulling on it with affection and sometimes something darker.
From the swelling cosmic folk of “Mint and Tobacco,” which features Knouse intoning apocalyptically over engineer Michael Krassner’s washing guitars, “Your breathing ain’t so deep,” to the jazz standard swooner-meets-West Coast psych-pop title track, to the nightmare-scape blues of “Clumsy Hunter,” to the concluding audio collage sway of “Banana, Orange, and Something Else,” Chipmunk’d presents the range and scope of Knouse’s style: bold, adventurous, frightening, and then frequently, when you least expect it, heartbreakingly lovely, like a joke that clarifies your feelings before you could actually verbalize what those feelings even are. They had been hidden from you, chipmunk’d away, but now Max Knouse has revealed them.