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Barnes and Noble

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit

Current price: $14.99
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit

Barnes and Noble

Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit

Current price: $14.99

Size: CD

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During his time with
the Drive-By Truckers
,
Jason Isbell
always sported the least grizzled voice of the bunch, a surprisingly radio-ready baritone that sounded smoother than
Patterson Hood
's sandpaper croon and more streamlined than
Mike Cooley
's twang. That voice carries more weight in
Isbell
's solo material, where melody and lyrics are emphasized over the swaggering guitar riffs of his previous group. Credited to
and his new backing band,
Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
finds the songwriter reprising the same formula showcased on 2007's
Sirens of the Ditch
: a mix of Southern rock and rootsy, melancholic country-soul that manages to both elevate and commiserate during its 52 minutes. The result may be fairly similar to
Sirens
' sound, but
400 Unit
marks
's final move away from
the Truckers
, whose influence permeated
in its production (helmed by
) and host of backing musicians (including
Shonna Tucker
DBT
's bassist and
's former wife). Here,
and his four bandmates close the studio doors to outside help, allowing several horn players to make a cameo on
"No Choice in the Matter"
but essentially playing everything else themselves. The result is a smart and tasteful record that sees
training his songwriting eye on subjects of wartime romance, memory, and dead-end small towns. There are rock songs here -- including
"Soldiers Get Strange"
and
"Good,"
both of which seem to take more influence from
Tom Petty
than
Lynyrd Skynyrd
-- but
sounds most comfortable with the midtempo numbers, from the subdued shuffle of
"Sunburn"
(sample lyric: "I never meant to get bored with you but I never meant to stay") to the instrumental strains of
"Coda."
"I saw her in Roosevelt Springs, where time doesn't touch anything," he sings in
"Cigarettes and Wine,"
a seven-minute homage to a bartender who takes in downtrodden men and selflessly suffers their despondence. Just barely out of his twenties, he writes with the well-worn weariness of someone twice his age, but
's youth nevertheless breathes energy into a formula that's been revisited by many Southern-born songwriters before. ~ Andrew Leahey

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