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Calvin Johnson and the Sons of the Soil
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Calvin Johnson and the Sons of the Soil
Current price: $11.99
Barnes and Noble
Calvin Johnson and the Sons of the Soil
Current price: $11.99
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Ever since he helped found
Beat Happening
in 1982,
Calvin Johnson
has been far more interested in music that feels right and honest than sounds that are technically precise, and for good or ill he's become an avatar of the concept of inspired amateurism in the quarter-decade that's followed. But no doubt a few fans have wondered over the years, "What would
sound like if he sang with a real
rock & roll
band -- one with musicians who could actually play their instruments?"
Calvin Johnson and the Sons of the Soil
is a game attempt to answer this question. Featuring
Johnson
fronting a band including
Kyle Field
from
Little Wings
on bass and
Jason Anderson
(
Wolf Colonel
) and
Adam Forkner
Yume Bitsu
) trading off on drums and guitar, this album documents
revisiting nine songs from his various post-
projects, but while this group certainly couldn't compete with
the Mahavishnu Orchestra
in the chops department, the results are technically accomplished in a way very little of
's music has been in the past. This band can creditably cut the
funk
on
"Banana Meltdown,"
generate a cloud of sexy menace on
"Booty Run,"
sound romantic and winsome on
"Can We Kiss,"
and make a great slice of
jangle pop
out of
"Sand."
So how does this new embrace of technically skilled performing impact the group's frontman? A bit surprisingly,
takes to this stuff like a duck to water; while his craggy baritone still wobbles a bit (as it always has), for the most part he slips into the role of "professional entertainer" with tongue-in-cheek aplomb (as the two examples of live show patter included here demonstrate), and on these songs he shows a confidence and an expressive range that's broader than he's revealed in the past, digging deeper into the emotional heart of the lyrics now he has a firmer foundation to stand on.
doesn't reveal him to be the new
Sinatra
, but anyone who has ever heard
and said "that guy can't sing" might be in for a surprise when they hear this disc. ~ Mark Deming
Beat Happening
in 1982,
Calvin Johnson
has been far more interested in music that feels right and honest than sounds that are technically precise, and for good or ill he's become an avatar of the concept of inspired amateurism in the quarter-decade that's followed. But no doubt a few fans have wondered over the years, "What would
sound like if he sang with a real
rock & roll
band -- one with musicians who could actually play their instruments?"
Calvin Johnson and the Sons of the Soil
is a game attempt to answer this question. Featuring
Johnson
fronting a band including
Kyle Field
from
Little Wings
on bass and
Jason Anderson
(
Wolf Colonel
) and
Adam Forkner
Yume Bitsu
) trading off on drums and guitar, this album documents
revisiting nine songs from his various post-
projects, but while this group certainly couldn't compete with
the Mahavishnu Orchestra
in the chops department, the results are technically accomplished in a way very little of
's music has been in the past. This band can creditably cut the
funk
on
"Banana Meltdown,"
generate a cloud of sexy menace on
"Booty Run,"
sound romantic and winsome on
"Can We Kiss,"
and make a great slice of
jangle pop
out of
"Sand."
So how does this new embrace of technically skilled performing impact the group's frontman? A bit surprisingly,
takes to this stuff like a duck to water; while his craggy baritone still wobbles a bit (as it always has), for the most part he slips into the role of "professional entertainer" with tongue-in-cheek aplomb (as the two examples of live show patter included here demonstrate), and on these songs he shows a confidence and an expressive range that's broader than he's revealed in the past, digging deeper into the emotional heart of the lyrics now he has a firmer foundation to stand on.
doesn't reveal him to be the new
Sinatra
, but anyone who has ever heard
and said "that guy can't sing" might be in for a surprise when they hear this disc. ~ Mark Deming