Single Review: We Demand Parachutes – “Cheerful Coping”

We Demand Parachutes live performance photo

photo by Mickey Renger; photo courtesy of Knyvet

Single Review of We Demand Parachutes: “Cheerful Coping”

If you’re a fan of bands like Good Charlotte, Simple Plan, and New Found Glory, you’re likely to really dig We Demand Parachutes‘ pop-punk banger “Cheerful Coping.” Guitarist/vocalist Kevin McCord is joined by Ben Shumaker (drums/percussion) and Seth Richardson (bass and programming) to deliver an infectious, memorable, resolute rocker.

We Demand Parachutes – "Cheerful Coping" single cover

image courtesy of Knyvet

The guitars jangle, and even though the tempo is relatively slow, the guitars and drums pick up the pace, making the song seem faster than it really is. The distorted, muddy music bed provides a buzzy backdrop of crackling energy. And the beat, particularly leading into the chorus provide a modest pogoing vigor.

The band has produced two versions of “Cheerful Coping,” and, while the radio edit’s “bloodshot” is actually a much more clever lyric, the original version is more fun to sing along with.

We Demand Parachutes live performance photo

photo by Internal Vision; photo courtesy of Knyvet

I’m not entirely sure which version of this catchy tune I’m going to save to my phone, since it will eventually pop up on one of my #PhoneOnShuffle playlists. I often listen in coffeeshops and diners, so I’d need to be able to resist accidentally singing along with the NSFW version, but I’m not sure I can. But that’s my problem, not yours. You need to hear this song because it’s catchy af and a great energy release.

“Cheerful Coping” was We Demand Parachutes’ first single and title track from the band’s 6-song EP, Cheerful Coping.

 

Single Review: The Lilac Hour – “Feeling Again”

The Lilac Hour – "Feeling Again" single cover

image courtesy of BJF Media

Single Review of The Lilac Hour: “Feeling Again”

The Lilac Hour – Jake McCollum (lead singer, rhythm guitar), Matt Davies-Saunders (lead guitar), James Katz (bass), and Matt Volpato (drums) – is a London-based indie/alt-rock band whose style is laid-back but with a certain type of energy – in other words, laid-back but not lazy, songs with direction, music that’s going somewhere.

The band’s overall broad-appeal alt-rock sound is timeless and draws upon apparent influences spanning several decades. “Feeling Again” would be my recommended introduction to The Lilac Hour for fans of ’80s British pop/new wave bands like Tears for Fears or The Human League. Not the faster songs. “Feeling Again” has a slower pace with a flowing sound and some big, round, fat moments in Jake McCollum’s vocals.

The Lilac Hour

photo courtesy of BJF Media

For a more modern reference, it’s worth noting that “Feeling Again” was recorded at Kempston Street Studios in Liverpool, where Blossoms and Coldplay recording many of their earlier songs like “Charlamagne” and “Yellow,” respectively, and you can hear a bit of a similar sonic vibe in “Feeling Again,” particularly compared with “Charlamagne.”

In any case, “Feeling Again” is a cool song that fans of modern alt-rock and older Britpop alike are likely to enjoy. Or, as in my case, those who simply like well-written songs. If any of that describes you, check out “Feeling Again.”

More Recently

Since the release of “Feeling Again,” The Lilac Hour has dropped two more singles – “Everyone But You” and “Strawberry Lemonade.”

Album Review: Anaria – Holding Cell

Anaria band photo

photo by Wildthorn Productions; photo courtesy of Anaria

Album Review of Anaria: Holding Cell

Anaria is a powerful, progressive metal band featuring soaring vocals, shredding guitar, and intricate song arrangements. Yes, I’ve just described any decent band of this subgenre, but it’s the details that count, so let’s dig in.

Stylistically, Anaria might share the stage with Evanescence, Edge of Paradise, or Major Moment. Their music frequently shows pop sensibility (a la Evanescence) but only to the extent that a modern metal band might occasionally appeal to a broader audience without sacrificing their street cred. The Edge of Paradise comparison is due to a combination of powerful vocals that produce many soaring tracks but also the willingness to experiment with unusual tempos and arrangements from time to time. The Major Moment comparison is the band’s ability to create a powerful wall of melodic modern metal sound that’ll blow their listeners’ minds, but this might be the least obvious comparison because when they reach musical peaks of power, the two bands’ tendencies are to take the songs in very different directions. And yes, the Evanescence comp was a lazy comparison on my part, which I included mostly because I figure the broadest set of readers will know the reference. But I’m sure modern metal fans will also know the other comps. And many of you already know Anaria – the band’s large social media following and 2024 New England Music Awards nomination in the Hard Rock/Metal Act of the Year category prove they’re garnering some well-earned attention.

Anaria – Holding Cell album cover

image courtesy of Anaria

Holding Cell kicks of with the title track, a powerful number that pulls you in immediately with a very cinematic-feeling opening, followed by flowing verses intermingled with thumping choruses and the lyric you’ll want to sing along with: “Is this real? Because it feels like hell!” This feels like a big concert-opening number that would amp up an arena full of fans. I can even picture the light show – at times dark with lasers shooting through the fog, other times, a big wall of blinding lights flashing, pointed directly at the audience. Always cool when a song is so rockin’ that you can picture it as an arena performance. Totally love starting an album with a number like “Holding Cell.”

Next song, “Synthesis” soars vocally atop a heavy, thumping soundbed, akin to “Holding Cell.” It’s followed by “Freakshow,” an edgier number with a bit of a carnival-flavored music bed, with the harsher vocals (at times) showcasing Jessica Mercy’s vocal versatility. “The Sandman” seems a bit more straight-up heavy but includes some winding rhythms and sprinkles in a little musical uneasiness. Sprinkled like sand, I suppose.

Anaria band photo

photo by Cory Wilmer; photo courtesy of Anaria

“Circle of Love” is notable for its particularly memorable chorus, a chorus that’s heavier than the song verses, which flow a bit lighter, but a bit more flowing than the bridges. It’s a cool song design, and the chorus’ rhythm is memorably, even if there are a bit more words than I can remember to sing along. As with any good progressive-influenced new metal track, of course, there’s a solid instrumental segment near the end, somehow delivering an enjoyable, song-element-heavy heavy rockin’ tune in under 3 minutes. Actually, that’s a them on this disc – songs that are relatively short for Anaria’s genre, even though nothing’s missing.

“Worthy” is probably one of the songs most likely to reach a very broad audience. It’s a slower, melodic-yet-powerful – Anaria’s sound is always super-robust – song with emotionally soaring vocals, a new metal slow song with a sound that perfectly matches its message. It’s a song about valuing yourself despite life’s struggling, with lyrics: “See yourself like I do. Beautiful scars are part of you. See your flaws and embrace them ‘cause you are perfect how you are, and you are worthy of love.” The lyrics are something anyone who has struggled can relate to, and they’re affirming uplifting. “Worthy” is a powerful track.

“Vampire Disco,” next, is a bit more playful, sung with a vocal slyness in the opening, with sidewinding guitar work, and a really cool, brief pause before crashing into the chorus.

photo of Anaria from the filming of their music video "The Sandman"

photo by Kendall Couture, for Wildthorn Productions; photo courtesy of Anaria

Anaria continues to mix its tone and sounds within the envelope of the band’s general style. “Ritual” is musically aggressive. “Golden Crown” is a little slower-tempoed (for the most part). And “The Red Queen” soars but still manages to fit the ominous lyrics.

Finally, the band closes with its cover of HIM’s “Wings of a Butterfly.” It’s energetic and fun to sing along with, at least until you realize you’ve just screamed “Come on and show them your love. Rip out the wings of a butterfly.” Hopefully no one heard it. Anaria’s cover sports a bigger sound, features vocals that soar a bit more, and is musically a little heavier than the original. All in all, an exceptional cover. And a song you might know right of the bat as you get familiar with the rest of the disc.

My favorites on Holding Cell are “Holding Cell,” “Vampire Disco,” and “Worthy” – one fast, one mid-tempo, and one slow. But ask me tomorrow, and I’ll probably choose others. In all, this is a strong release from an arena-caliber melodic/progressive metal band.

More Recently

Since releasing Holding Cell, Anaria has also released an EP, Sign of Life, which the band notes is a 3-song collection of unreleased material with a space theme, and three more singles: “Trigger,” “Crave,” and a cover of Lady Gaga’s “Disease.”

Album Review: Walter Sickert & the Army of Broken Toys – Between Breaths

Walter Sickert & the Army of Broken Toys – Between Breaths album coverAlbum Review of Walter Sickert & the Army of Broken Toys: Between Breaths

I can’t really explain why I enjoy listening to Walter Sickert & the Army of Broken Toys so much. Their music is unusual, irreverant, sometimes outlandish, performed with precision, and joyously original and positively fun to listen to. Oh, will you look at that? I guess I can explain it.

More than a year ago, I reviewed this group’s exceptionally creative single “Goth Beach.” Well, Between Breaths is a full-length collection of Walter Sickert & the Army of Broken Toys’ theatrical, over-the-top originals, and it’s the album you never knew you really needed.

Disc-opener “Bed and Breakfast” is probably my favorite in the collection. At least, it’s the most memorable, notably that I’ll always refer to a B&B now as a bed and “motherf***ing breakfast!” The lyrics are imaginative and fun, and the vocal delivery is soaring and edgy, sometimes simultaneously.

Stylistic variance is significant across the selections on this record, though they’re all very clearly within the somewhat exaggerated musical delivery style of Walter Sickert & the Army of Broken Toys.

“Wally Wonka,” for example, sounds musically like psychedelically demented carousel music. (And if randomly pops into my head all the time, so it’s clearly catchy!) “Firefly” and “Holes in the Sky,” meanwhile, could be powerful classic or progressive rock songs with different arrangements; instead, it sounds like a WS&tAoBT cover of such a song (though, of course, it’s an original).

“Laundromat” and “Pusssy Cat” deliver another style, along the lines of over-the-top, rhythmic industrial music-styled tunes.

“Silver Screens” and “Around the Circle” are softer, more atmospheric songs, with “Silver Screens” having somewhat softer edges and, therefore, being the song more likely to appeal to a broader listenership.

If you ever wanted to have this band committed to an asylum, well, a lot of their songs would do the trick, but “Dream Spell for Time Travel,” a less-than-one-minute spoken word track, is perhaps the best option. Tim Burton would have a hard time matching this odd prose. However, it leads into “Ima Hex,” whose rhythmic rise and fall is based on an exceptionally engaging rhythm and Sickert’s emotionally raw (perhaps hysterically so) vocals that are gravelly scream-sung at the song’s apexes. OK, so it’s hard to describe, but it’s engaging as hell… or hex.

The rest of the disc continues in a similarly eclectic way. “I Shine Me Down” has a catchy rhythm. “City in an IV” is a distantly rhythmic number. “Between Breaths” is a softly psychedelic, relaxing-mood piece. And, finally, “Never Sleep Nervously” starts with an almost music-box piano feeling before flowing into an oddly disturbing number that might be sung by a deranged clown that haunts your dreams. It’s an effectively unnerving way to end an album. But that’s exactly what you’d expect from this exceptionally talented troupe that might be described as the carnival sideshow of Boston’s top musical outfits. (That’s meant, of course, in the best possible way.)

Personally, my favorite songs on Between Breaths are probably “Bed and Breakfast,” “Holes in the Sky,” “Silver Screens,” and “Ima Hex.” Give this unusual 14-song collection a listen and, if you enjoy the musical insanity therein, see which songs will be your faves.

Album Review: Saxon – Hell, Fire and Damnation

Saxon – Hell, Fire and Damnation album cover

image courtesy of New Ocean Media

Album Review of Saxon: Hell, Fire and Damnation

Classic metal. That was always Saxon. All rock fans always respected Saxon and knew a Saxon concert would be a hell of a concert, even fans of less heavy, more melodic metal (which – who are we kidding? – was really melodic hard rock, and I say that as a huge fan of that subgenre). Well, Saxon hasn’t lost a step. Hell, Fire and Damnation is a heavy rock album full of classic old-style metal, varying significantly from song to song but always relentless.

The album starts with a minute-and-a-half spoken word opening, “The Prophecy,” delivered ominously by renowned English actor Brian Blessed OBE. It sounds like the opening proclamation of the sort of epic fantasy movie the album’s cover would suggest. The songs that soar are almost Dio-reminiscent, while others are merely weighty guitar-driven classic heavy rock.

The title track, “Hell, Fire and Damnation,” is a steadily plodding classic power rocker, with Biff Byford’s vocals echoing as if from a mountaintop. There’s plenty of power guitar, as well as dancing guitar solos, from axemen Doug Scarratt and Brian Tatler. And the rhythm section of Nigel Glockler (drums) and Nibbs Carter (bass) is heart-thumpingly heavy.

Next up, “Madame Guillotine” opens with a softer version of its dominant rhythm, one that’s interrupted only for a mid-song softly meandering guitar solo before additional instruments join back in and reintroduce the pounding rhythm.

Focusing on Marie Antoinette, that’s just the first of the historically-based songs on the album. Other historical subjects covered on the disc are Kubla Khan (“Kubla Khan and the Merchant of Venice”), the Battle of Hastings (“1066”), and the Salem witch trials (“Witches of Salem”). The band also goes historically supernatural on “There’s Something in Roswell.”

Album-ender “Super Charger” is a strong way to finish, full of energy and power. A great driving song, especially if you’re on the autobahn because with its tempo, there’s no way you’re keeping it below 120 mph – I mean, 193 kph.

My three favorite tracks are “Hell, Fire and Damnation,” “Madame Guillotine,” and “Super Charger,” but the album is so solid, I’m sure there’ll be plenty of disagreement. Hell, Fire and Damnation is a great beginning-to-end listen. The guitarwork is impeccable, and it’s probably the main reason this disc doesn’t feel too heavy to me, even though it’s clearly an awesome display of rock power. It will not disappoint fans of heavy rock. Aside from the occasional brief respite to showcase powerful vocals or fancy guitar shredding, this album is relentless old-school-power heavy rock.

Single Review: Derek Smith and the Cosmic Vultures – “White Spade Symphony”

Derek Smith and the Cosmic Vultures – "White Spade Symphony" single cover

image courtesy of Knyvet

Single Review of Derek Smith and the Cosmic Vultures: “White Spade Symphony”

“White Spade Symphony” from Derek Smith and the Cosmic Vultures is the best brand-new ’70s-style psychedelic classic rock song you’ll have heard in quite some time.

Derek Smith and the Cosmic Vultures band photo

photo courtesy of Knyvet

The song clocks in at under 4 minutes, but it feels longer, as would be expected from a true ’70s psychedelic rocker. There’s a long instrumental section in the middle of the song that showcases screaming classing rock axework, giving it the feeling of one of those 5-to-7 minute AOR opuses from the seventies. (Note the foreshadowing there, kids.) There are segments of the song that remind me of Buffalo Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth (Stop, Hey What’s That Sound),” though the classic rock reference is meant more generally, based on the tone of the guitars and the thin, distant seventies rock sound of Derek’s vocals.

In any case, “White Spade Symphony” is memorable and so well-done that it will soon become a favorite if you’re a fan of guitar-based classic rock in general, not just the ’70s psychedelic subcategory.

More Recently

Since the release of “White Spade Symphony,” the band has released two more singles – “Tomorrow Morning” and “Songbird” – and a full-length album, Opus, which contains both of those two singles but not “White Spade Symphony.”

Single Reviews: Twisted Rose – “Broken Glass” and “Coming Back”

Twisted Rose band photo

photo courtesy of Twisted Rose

Single Reviews: Twisted Rose – “Broken Glass” and “Coming Back” (7Hard)

Twisted Rose has released several singles in advance of the planned February 28 release of its upcoming album Escape. Two of my favorites are “Broken Glass” and “Coming Back.”

Twisted Rose – "Broken Glass" single cover

image courtesy of Twisted Rose

You may recall that I reviewed Twisted Rose’s Cherry Tales album about a year ago. I’ve been excited to hear the band’s new singles and am looking forward to hearing the upcoming full-length album.

“Broken Glass” is one of Twisted Rose’s signature relatively-fast-paced, energetic, hard rockers. It starts with a steady, plodding heavy rock rhythm, but that’s just the long intro. When the song starts its first verse, the tempo picks up, and by the time the chorus comes around, “Broken Glass” has kicked into fast-speed asskicking mode, driven by Chris Bones’ screaming axework and Caro’s classic buzzsaw hard rock vocals. Mad props, too, to a late-song bridge that brings the volume down a bit, allowing band and listeners to catch their breath before launching back into full-on power rock mode for the song’s ending.

Twisted Rose – "Coming Back" single cover

image courtesy of Twisted Rose

“Coming Back,” meanwhile, is one of Twisted Rose’s signature-style ballads. The soft guitar support provides the ideal backdrop for Caro’s emotional vocals, smooth but with an edge, just as hard rock ballads’ vocals ought to be. The lyrics are emotional, and the song’s arrangement is ideal for drawing the listener in, resulting in a beautiful ballad that’ll leave a lump in your throat before the song is through as lyrics and vocals combine effectively. In the end, the lyrics conclude that “home” is a person, not a place.

Twisted Rose has released six songs on Spotify since Cherry Tales. Presumably, those will form some of what’ll be released on the Escape album in a few weeks, so you can look there for a preview. Personally, I’d suggest starting with the two songs I just reviewed – a kickass rocker and a ballad – to get your first taste of Twisted Rose’s new music.

Album Review: Emerson, Lake & Powell – Complete Collection

Emerson, Lake & Powell band photo

photo courtesy of Glass Onyon PR

Album Review of Emerson, Lake & Powell: Complete Collection (Cherry Red Records)

Last year, Cherry Red Records released a 3-CD box set of Emerson, Lake & Powell‘s music. 3 CDs? How is that possible when the band only released one studio album and one live album? Well, the self-titled album is disc one, featuring three bonus tracks – two B-sides and a “single edit” of “The Score.” The second CD contains The Sprocket Sessions, a live rehearsals collection heretofore only available as a bootleg, a 12-song album that features six of the songs from the debut album. The third album is the live album, Live in Concert.

Emerson, Lake & Powell – Complete Collection album cover

image courtesy of Glass Onyon PR

I know many of you will already know this, but I’ll include it for newbies to ELP. Of course, Emerson, Lake & Powell isn’t the classic line-up of ELP. That was Keith Emerson, Greg Lake, and Carl Palmer – Emerson, Lake & Palmer. The original ELP quietly broke up in 1979. In 1984, while Palmer was now a member of successful supergroup Asia, Emerson and Lake were auditioning drummers to hit the road again. They enjoyed performing with ex-Whitesnake drummer Cozy Powell. The band insists the “P” in Powell’s last name was just a coincidence, but nevertheless, it ushered in a one-studio-album version of ELP with Powell in place of Palmer.

I don’t think I ever owned any of ELP’s albums, though I was familiar with at least a couple of the songs, particularly “Touch and Go,” which received some airplay on MTV and moderate radio play; it actually hit number 60 on the Billboard Hot 100. And the Emerson, Lake & Powell version of ELP is the one that coincided with my music fandom, so this is my ELP.

My personal favorite track from the studio album, Emerson, Lake & Powell, remains “Touch and Go.” It soars with that big, open, we’re-performing-in-a-big-empty-warehouse echo that was present in many of the seventies and eighties progressive rock songs that crossed over to mainstream rock fans. It just feels expansive but also rockin’. A close second, for me, is album-opener “The Score,” which, like “Touch and Go,” features Emerson’s big, open organ-sounding keyboard sound. The original version of “The Score” clocks in at 9:10, so it makes sense there’s a “single edit.” The single edit still runs 6:11, though, so it’s still not exactly conducive to mainstream radio. (“Touch and Go,” meanwhile, clocks in at an airplay-friendly 3:39.) The whole disc is strong – it’s Emerson, Lake & Powell, after all, and these guys are legends for good reason – so your favorites may differ. Maybe you’ll like something mellower like “Step Aside,” a song that saunters along coolly and on which the keyboardwork is like a piano. The added tracks are cool, too. Notably, there’s a nifty instrumental version of “The Loco-Motion” that gets the full ELP treatment.

Emerson, Lake & Powell band photo

photo courtesy of Glass Onyon PR

Discs two and three in the box set – The Sprocket Sessions and Live in Concert – will probably be of the greatest interest to hardcore ELP fans. That is, if you don’t own the discs already. You’ll find five of the eight songs from the studio album on The Sprocket Sessions, with three of them – “Touch and Go,” “The Score,” and “Mars, the Bringer of War” – also appearing on Live in Concert.

The rest of discs two and three are primarily Emerson, Lake and Palmer songs. “Knife Edge,” “Lucky Man,” and “Pirates” are on both discs. Well, sort of. “Lucky Man” on The Sprocket Sessions is just a 48-second instrumental snippet. But “Pirates” runs 13-plus minutes on both discs, so you’re not getting shortchanged there. The Live in Concert disc closes with a medley of “Karn Evil 9 (1st Impression),” “America,” and “Rondo” that’s kicked off with the memorable ELP line “Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends.” If you’re a rock fan from that era, even if you had no idea what song (or band) it came from, you’ll still definitely remember that line. At least, that’s true for me. And yes, “America” is a musical nod to West Side Story. And thus ends the three-disc collection, quite a haul for an exceptional band of legendary musicians whose studio output was but a single album.

Album Review: The Rifters – The Enchanted World

The Rifters band photo

photo by Teri McCartney; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

Album Review of The Rifters: The Enchanted World (Howlin’ Dog Records)

You may remember that country music was previously referred to as “country and western” music. The “and western” has been dropped from the moniker almost everywhere. But the Rifters are a reminder about that forgotten segment of the music spectrum, delivering a brand of Americana that mixes a western openness, folky songwriting, and a bit of country. If music can sound like the American southwest, then this is what that sounds like. And in case you don’t notice from the music itself, there are plenty of ranching and wide-open-spaces references in the lyrics. To me, the music seems folk-centered, so I’d probably just call it very good folk music, but my folk categorization is largely tied to the album’s song- and lyric-centric with a lot of guitar picking. However, the richer music bed and the harmonies suggest something bigger, so Americana is more likely a most representative category for this trio – Rod Taylor, Jim Bradley, and Don Richmond – and the talented musicians who joined them in the studio for a song here and there among The Enchanted World‘s fourteen tracks.

The Rifters – The Enchanted World album cover

image courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“The Circle,” the first song on band’s recent album, The Enchanted World, opens with some attention-grabbing finger-picking that soon progresses to an overall soaring musical style and features a matter-of-fact vocal delivery that signals authenticity. And, with that, this particular, pleasant musical journey with The Rifters has begun.

“The Greatest Mystery,” next, is another standout slower number; then the tempo picks up a little on the third song, the title track.

“The Perfect Dance” is a nifty banjo-pickin’ country dancehall number strung together with clever phrasing in both the lyrics and the music.

“It’s Cause You Lived” follows, an ode to aging with a very soft seventies pop-country styled soundbed. It’s followed by a more uptempo “At the Foot of the Mountain,” a song that makes me think a little of John Denver’s “Country Roads,” with smooth vocals but supporting instrumentation that’s bit more rustic and elicits mental imagery more befitting of an episode of The Waltons.

The Rifters band photo

photo by Jim Cox; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“The Dollar Worth of Mother Earth” follows, earnestly and tunefully calling for humans to take better care of nature. Indeed, there’s nothing more “western” than a cultural connection to the land, caring about leaving nature unspoiled, taking care of the earth, taking our stewardship of mother earth seriously. In this case, the song is, lyrically, a bit of an apology from a generation that created this mess to those that follow, urging action.

I like that such a heavy song is followed by the playful “Tres Peis,” cheerfully honoring a friend’s joyful three-legged dog, before the Rifters slow things down with “The Wonder of You,” a song whose musical arrangement and performance make it seem like something you’d slow dance to during a barn dance.

Next up is one of my favorite songs on the disc, surprisingly one of the few this trio didn’t pen themselves, a cover of “Nothing is Free,” originally written and recorded by Moors & McCumber.  The Rifters’ performance is something special, with prominent string bass and fiddle parts providing the ideal soundbed for Rod’s vocal delivery.

The Rifters band photo

photo by Teri McCartney; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“That Lucky Old Sun,” a 1949 number one hit for Frankie Lane, is delivered by the Rifters as an engaging pretty-slow song performed with an old-fashioned, stripped-down delivery.

“So Many Different Things” is sneaky brilliant, as it reveals over a few very careful listens. It has a more uptempo delivery again, an uplift from the prior track; it doesn’t quite have the energy of “Nothing is Free” but is still one of the more moderately energetic songs in the collection. The vocals are simultaneously light and earnest. The violin also touches upon playfulness but with a tone that isn’t convincingly cheerful. In the end, the song musically portrays exceptionally well the weight of the world while still being hopeful and perhaps a bit defiant.

The Rifters live performance photo

photo by Dave Hensley; photo courtesy of Broken Jukebox Media

“At the Rail,” next, is more unapologetically dark. Rod’s deep vocals are so deep and booming they’re nearly Johnny Cash-esque. The instrumentation is relatively simple – acoustic guitar, bass, and accordion – and the musical arrangement is sparse, with the instruments providing just the necessary support for the vocals.

The Rifters close The Enchanted World with a fun rendition of “Gentle on My Mind.” I’m most familiar with the Glen Campbell version. Of course, it was originally written and performed, with success, by John Hartford. The most recent band to find success with “Gentle on My Mind” was the Band Perry just a few years ago. Well, the Rifters’ outstanding rendition, with the assistance of Pete Wernick’s energetic banjo playing, sounds like a concert-ending song – or perhaps a bar-closing number – sending you home with a smile. You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here. However, since this is an album, you can go back to song number one and play it again.

Album Review: Chris Wragg and Greg Copeland – The Last Sundown

photo courtesy of Chris Wragg

Album Review of Chris Wragg and Greg Copeland: The Last Sundown

Greg Copeland’s deep, hoarse-yet-smooth, rough-hewn vocals and Chris Wragg’s guitarwork, which is at times deft and at other times emits a soulful wail, are about as blues as it gets. The Last Sundown, the second full-length album from Chris Wragg and Greg Copeland, is a deep and powerful release, covering a broad swath of blues ground across its 14 tracks, which run the gamut of blues tempos and delivery styles.

The album kicks off with a blues wailer, a cover of Louisiana Red’s “Alabama Train,” a track you’ll enjoy almost immediately and one of just two covers on the album. Chris and Greg follow it with a slower number, “Can’t Shake These Blues,” an earnest but smooth song that will soon have you singing along with “I’ve been misused, and I’ve been abused, but I just can’t shake these blues.”

image courtesy of Chris Wragg

“Don’t Let the Devil Ride” is probably the funniest song on the album. The oft-covered Oris Mays track is absolutely done justice by Chris and Greg, from Chris’ riffs ranging from jagged to rip-roaring and Greg’s vocals primarily earnest but also acknowledging the lyrics’ silliness with his vocal inflection in the spoken word portion.

Before and after that fun number are a pair of songs that delve into shameful times in American history. “1964” is a soulful civil rights song on which Chris’ unnerving, dancing guitar line and the nuances of the song’s mix combine well with Greg’s heavy, rough-edged vocals, with spoken words “We got to love each other, y’all” near the end of the song providing the forward-looking words to live by. Meanwhile, “The Last Sundown” is told from the point of view of the great great great great grandson of a slaveowner and a slave talking to the slaveowner on the last night of his life, via emotional lyrics that include his closing words, “As I look so deep into your eyes, I get the chance to see just how a coward dies.” The tempo and the guitar riffs add to the power of the vocals and lyrics. The song’s closing lyrics are an indictment on just how little things have progressed since then: “I guess the only thing that changes in America is the weather.”

photo courtesy of Chris Wragg

“House Burned Down” takes on the task of following that powerhouse, and its softly sung and sparsely instrumented arrangement meets that task with aplomb. “Losing Hand,” next, is kind of a slow-rocking blues number with a nifty guitar hook, a probably crowd-pleasing “say yeah” lyric, and an always enjoyable rhythm – one of those songs you’ll turn up the volume to whenever you hear it.

“When the Cold Winds Blow” is perhaps the best slow-tempo song on the disc, with a slowly-plodding rhythm propelling the song forward. Meanwhile, “Miss Ruby” and “Just a Man” offer some mid-tempo enjoyment with varying soundbeds – “Miss Ruby” more booming, “Just a Man” more of a jazzy blues groove.

“After the Sun Goes Down” warrants mention, with a guitar line that’s almost a blues-based classic rocker before the album closes with one final slow, dark, and weighty number, “Gonna Be With My Maker.”

Beginning to end, The Last Sundown is a powerful album, impeccably performed and memorable. If you’re a blues fan, it’s an absolute must-hear.