"Songs of Love and Death (Deluxe)" es una fascinante edición en CD de Me And That Man bajo el sello reconocido internacionalmente Cooking Vinyl / Indigo. Esta versión deluxe invita al oyente a sumergirse en paisajes musicales que fusionan el folk oscuro con el blues y el country alternativo mediante melodías hipnóticas y letras profundas sobre amor y muerte; cada canción narra historias envolventes cargadas de emoción e intensidad artística única del grupo liderado por Adam "Nergal" Darski ? conocido mundialmente como vocalista principal de la banda polaca Behemoth? quien aquí explora su pasión por los sonidos americanos tradicionales desde 2017 junto a colaboraciones destacadas dentro del panorama rock/metal global que han consolidado su éxito internacionalmente reconocido por crítica y público especializado.Cooking Vinyl/Indigo destaca como uno de los sellos independientes más influyentes apoyando propuestas musicales originales con total libertad creativa para sus artistas.
"Songs ..." turned out to be commonplace before the grinding of teeth. I still hoped that the project would be pulled by "that man" - John Porter, an Englishman who had migrated to then-communist Poland forty years ago for ideological reasons and had previously been seen in extremely unorthodox electro-folk-punk-damn clear collaborations. But he, apparently, also could not - or did not want to. So no Polish Angry Johnny and the Killbillies even smells here. Upstairs from Johnny Cash, upstairs from the late Those Poor Bastards, plus a bit of Leonard Cohen, plus a pinch of Scrimin Jay Hawkins. Even the title of the release reveals the laziness of its creators. The problem is not even that it echoes Coen's "Songs of Love and Hate". It's all about banality - well, imagine a rap album with the title "songs about how I roasted your bitch." It’s just that every fucking country alternative singer and almost every orthodox bluesman sing about Love and Death, and how exactly they sing - this is where the fantasy comes in. Me and That Man does not have it - just a set of clichés. Here you have abandoned churches, here are flocks of bats, lovers who have died untimely, a bottle of bourbon on an old oak table cut by knives. Vampires, sirens, voodoo queens. Surely also werewolves - but that's not for sure.
The only hypertrophic gloom of release is the best. True, here too our duet will be given a head start by a guy named King Dude - not an ideal comrade in terms of creativity, but he knows how to scare and twist figs in his pocket. Yes, and the Them Pulp Criminals mentioned above, although they specifically established it with production, were still able to present to the public something at least relatively original.