Monday, October 31, 2011

Josh Ritter, "Lillian, Egypt"


Somehow, after more than a decade's worth of releases, Josh Ritter continues to fly under the mainstream radar. I simply cannot fathom why. Taken from Ritter's fourth studio album The Animal Years, "Lillian, Egypt" is an exemplary embodiment of Ritter's talents. The songwriting is clever and heartfelt, and when put to music it flows and blends with the measured percussion and slightly jagged, serrated electric guitar riff.

There is an old time feel to the lyrics and the song on the whole, as the music video will further illustrate. Ritter discusses the woman he pines for as being "The daughter of the biggest big town banker/He kept her like a princess/I stole her like the Fort Knox gold." In the last verse, a jangling piano solo that conjures images of silent films precedes a further bolstering the damsel in distress anecdote, with the line: "The last time I saw her she was tied to the train tracks."

With this song, Ritter reaches back into America's past in order to appropriately articulate his feelings in the present world. This is not unusual when considering that his self-designed major during college was titled "American History Through Narrative Folk Music."

Saturday, October 29, 2011

My Morning Jacket, "Movin' Away"


Jim James' voice always gives me shivers. The atmospheric drifting of guitar only adds to this sensation on "Movin' Away," the closing track from their recent album Circuital. For most of the song, the piano chords are struck in regimented fashion, paralleled by soothing percussion, but towards the finish these notes spiral away into some sleepy melody. All this is fitting, as James dreamily coos about moving forward and yet wistfully holds on to his past. Two beautiful verses, punctuated by James' chilling vocals, define these sentiments: "Don't know quite why/But I was feeling unsatisfied/I had to get out now/Try to find it," and "Possessed by your love/Under the influence/And though there's a new lifeline/I won't forget the one I left behind."




Friday, October 28, 2011

No Age "Skinned"

We're going to start fresh, and we're going to start slowly and small.

Today's random track of the day, taken from my ever-expanding iTunes library is No Age's "Skinned," off their 2010 album Everything in Between. On this most recent album more than ever, the punk duo are a bit of a paradox. The guitars offer a distorted fizzle and twinge and the drums thump and pound away, often with abandon. The lyrics, delivered by drummer Dean Spunt, are commonly unadorned and direct, but not without substance. Yet, there is a measure of orchestration and purposeful direction in the way these tracks are laid out. These songs are at time both raw, and decadently layered and expansive.


There is quite a lot of sound coming from these two gents. Enjoy, and stay tuned.