
A triumphant, sprawling affair likely to please a wide variety of demographics: neo-folkies, Dylan-heads, and even pop fans. When everyman minstrel Langhorne Slim opens his third album of folk-pop, Be Set Free,, with a line about a morbid identity crisis, it's more of a misleading lyrical gesture than a statement of mid-career crisis. "I don't wanna die, but I don't yet know where I belong", Slim sings on "Back to the Wild", the shimmering opener to an album that actually finds Slim right where he belongs: crooning, yelping, and shouting his way through...