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Easy Way
Barnes and Noble
Easy Way
Current price: $16.99
Barnes and Noble
Easy Way
Current price: $16.99
Size: CD
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Easy Way
seems to be an appropriate title for the sophomore set from
the Cactus Blossoms
, a Minneapolis-based brotherly duo who make no effort to disguise their enduring debt to
the Everly Brothers
. Like
You're Dreaming
before it,
leans into harmonies that recall
Don
and
Phil
, supporting this soft, supple blend with sounds that evoke a time before
the Beatles
. Unlike its 2016 predecessor, this 2019 album does nod toward the present, with the duo singing about pocket computers on the lively "Please Don't Call Me Crazy" and lamenting low wages on "Downtown," a song that conjures ghosts of the
Petula Clark
hit of the same name. Far from breaking
' retro spell, these lyrics underscore how the group isn't content with re-creating the past. Rather, the duo is intent on extending a tradition, constructing songs with elements culled from a shared vocabulary and then finding emotional undercurrents that make their songs seem alive. Because
move steadily and gracefully, they make this fusion seem easy, but that's a trick: Their music is subtly crafted and deeply felt, which means that for as comforting as
feels upon its first listen, it has the depth to not only last but improve with subsequent spins. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
seems to be an appropriate title for the sophomore set from
the Cactus Blossoms
, a Minneapolis-based brotherly duo who make no effort to disguise their enduring debt to
the Everly Brothers
. Like
You're Dreaming
before it,
leans into harmonies that recall
Don
and
Phil
, supporting this soft, supple blend with sounds that evoke a time before
the Beatles
. Unlike its 2016 predecessor, this 2019 album does nod toward the present, with the duo singing about pocket computers on the lively "Please Don't Call Me Crazy" and lamenting low wages on "Downtown," a song that conjures ghosts of the
Petula Clark
hit of the same name. Far from breaking
' retro spell, these lyrics underscore how the group isn't content with re-creating the past. Rather, the duo is intent on extending a tradition, constructing songs with elements culled from a shared vocabulary and then finding emotional undercurrents that make their songs seem alive. Because
move steadily and gracefully, they make this fusion seem easy, but that's a trick: Their music is subtly crafted and deeply felt, which means that for as comforting as
feels upon its first listen, it has the depth to not only last but improve with subsequent spins. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine