After dissolving his previous band
Red House Painters, singer/songwriter
Mark Kozelek resurfaced with
Sun Kil Moon, refining and expanding the luminous acoustic balladry and harrowingly intimate lyricism that were the hallmarks of his career to date. He debuted
Sun Kil Moon with 2002's
Ghosts of the Great Highway, an extension of
Red House Painters' melancholic dream pop sound. Following 2010's sparse yet exquisitely crafted
Admiral Fell Promises,
Kozelek's songwriting became much more direct, literal, and even humorous starting with 2012's
Among the Leaves. Released in 2014, the particularly confessional
Benji proved to be one of the most popular and critically acclaimed releases of
Kozelek's entire career.
Kozelek continued to explore a diary-like, self-referential songwriting style on subsequent releases such as 2015's
Universal Themes and two collaborations with
Jesu.
Born in Massillon, Ohio, in 1967,
Kozelek formed his first band, God Forbid, while in his teens. Upon relocating to Atlanta, he struck up a friendship with drummer Anthony Koutsos, and together they formed the first incarnation of
Red House Painters. A move to San Francisco followed, where guitarist
Gorden Mack and bassist
Jerry Vessel rounded out the group's roster. While performing on the Bay Area club circuit, the quartet came to the attention of
American Music Club frontman
Mark Eitzel, who often cited
Red House Painters as his favorite band. Through
Eitzel,
RHP's demo tape made its way to the London offices of 4AD Records, which signed the group and in 1992 issued the unvarnished demos -- a striking collection of Spartan, atmospheric melodies lurking behind
Kozelek's ghostly vocals -- as the LP
Down Colorful Hill. Subsequent efforts, highlighted by a pair of eponymous albums released back to back in 1993, established
Kozelek as a writer of stunning emotional depth, unflinchingly detailing his erratic, abusive nature and troubled background.
But relations with 4AD grew strained, and when
Kozelek began work on a long-rumored solo album in the wake of 1995's radiant
Ocean Beach, the label terminated
Red House Painters' contract. Although none of
Kozelek's bandmates appeared on the completed LP, the solo disc
Songs for a Blue Guitar was instead issued under the
RHP banner when it appeared on Island's Supreme imprint in 1996. The group reunited in late 1997 for one final album,
Old Ramon, but the Polygram/
Universal merger spelled Supreme's end, and the completed LP was indefinitely shelved.
Kozelek soon began work assembling and producing
Take Me Home: A Tribute to John Denver, an all-star cover record celebrating the life and music of the late folkie, and in 2000 issued his first proper solo effort,
Rock 'n' Roll Singer, a curious yet compelling patchwork highlighted by three
Bon Scott-era
AC/DC covers. Perhaps most surprising,
Kozelek also co-starred in filmmaker
Cameron Crowe's 2000 release Almost Famous, playing Larry Fellows, bassist for the fictional '70s hard rock band Stillwater. After securing the rights to
Old Ramon,
Kozelek licensed the album to Sub Pop for release in the spring of 2001. Later that same year, the label also issued his limited-edition solo set White Christmas Live.
In early 2002,
Kozelek assembled
Sun Kil Moon with former
Red House Painter Anthony Koutsos,
Black Lab bassist
Geoff Stanfield, and erstwhile
American Music Club drummer
Tim Mooney. Their debut LP,
Ghosts of the Great Highway, appeared to wide critical acclaim in late 2003, and
Kozelek assembled a new touring band to support its release, spending the better part of 2004 on the road. He also continued his film career, again playing a fictional musician in the 2005 big-screen adaptation of
Steve Martin's comedic novella Shopgirl. That summer,
Kozelek joined with
Low's
Alan Sparhawk in the classic rock cover band
the Retribution Gospel Choir, issuing a tour-only EP in advance of the second
Sun Kil Moon album, the much maligned
Tiny Cities, a collection of covers by indie rock band
Modest Mouse. The album was the first released on
Kozelek's own Caldo Verde label.
April, featuring guest vocals from
Will Oldham and
Ben Gibbard, followed in 2008.
Kozelek switched it up again for 2010's
Admiral Fell Promises; he recorded ten new songs accompanied only by a nylon-stringed guitar. The like-minded
Among the Leaves,
Kozelek's fifth outing under the moniker, arrived in 2012.
An especially direct collection of songs titled
Benji was issued in February of 2014. The album was an unexpected critical and commercial success, hitting number 75 in the Billboard 200 album chart and ranking in year-end lists from numerous publications, including FACT, which named it the best album of 2014.
Kozelek's sudden increase in media attention also spotlighted his infamously crabby on-stage behavior, which sometimes threatened to overshadow his music; a one-sided feud with
the War on Drugs was particularly well-publicized.
Kozelek ended 2014 with the long-promised release of
Sings Christmas Carols, his solo album of holiday standards.
Sun Kil Moon's seventh album,
Universal Themes, arrived in June of 2015.
Sun Kil Moon's long-rumored collaboration with
Justin Broadrick's project
Jesu was announced that year, with a pre-release track, "America's Most Wanted Mark Kozelek and John Dillinger," offered to websites in October. The album, simply titled
Jesu/Sun Kil Moon, appeared on Caldo Verde in January of 2016.
Kozelek then released an album of cover tunes simply titled Sings Favorites.
Sun Kil Moon's ambitious double-album
Common as Light and Love Are Red Valleys of Blood was released in February of 2017. This was followed by a second
Jesu collaboration, 30 Seconds to the Decline of Planet Earth. Following three releases under his own name (a collaboration with
Sean Yeaton, one with
Ben Boye and
Jim White, and an eponymous solo effort),
Kozelek resumed work as
Sun Kil Moon with 2018's
This Is My Dinner. The next year another lengthy album materialized in the form of
I Also Want to Die in New Orleans. The album's jazz-inflected instrumentals again featured contributions from drummer
Jim White as well as saxophonist
Donny McCaslin. ~ Jason Ankeny