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Notes of Blue [LP]
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Notes of Blue [LP]
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
Notes of Blue [LP]
Current price: $14.99
Size: CD
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In the grand tradition of
AC/DC
,
the Ramones
, and
Robert Pollard
Jay Farrar
is a guy who has essentially been making the same record over and over again throughout his career. That's not a bad thing; all of those artists have made plenty of great, powerful records that reflected a distinctive style that was theirs and theirs alone. Ever since
Uncle Tupelo
's
March 16-20, 1992
, where the divide between
Farrar
and
Jeff Tweedy
's writing styles became especially clear,
's music has been dominated by his deep, thoughtful vocals, his strong, elemental melodies, and his bursts of
Neil Young
-style roughhouse guitar. Twenty-five years on,
hasn't abandoned that formula, and while he puts a somewhat different spin on his songwriting on 2017's
Notes of Blue
, recorded with the latest edition of his band
Son Volt
, it's entirely obvious that this is
's work less than 30 seconds into the first track, "Promise the World."
's lineup has been fluid since
resurrected the band in 2005, but with
at the helm their musical personality has remained stable. The title
refers to his recent fascination with vintage rural blues that informed this batch of songs, but the lyrical fragments scavenged from ancient blues numbers and the bursts of slide guitar don't distract much from
's trademark roots rock attack.
is still a commanding vocalist, his guitar work remains powerful and muscular, and this new edition of
(
Mark Spencer
on bass, slide guitar, and piano,
Gary Hunt
on fiddle,
Jason Kardong
on pedal steel, and
Jacob Edwards
on drums) sounds taut and convincing. ~ Mark Deming
AC/DC
,
the Ramones
, and
Robert Pollard
Jay Farrar
is a guy who has essentially been making the same record over and over again throughout his career. That's not a bad thing; all of those artists have made plenty of great, powerful records that reflected a distinctive style that was theirs and theirs alone. Ever since
Uncle Tupelo
's
March 16-20, 1992
, where the divide between
Farrar
and
Jeff Tweedy
's writing styles became especially clear,
's music has been dominated by his deep, thoughtful vocals, his strong, elemental melodies, and his bursts of
Neil Young
-style roughhouse guitar. Twenty-five years on,
hasn't abandoned that formula, and while he puts a somewhat different spin on his songwriting on 2017's
Notes of Blue
, recorded with the latest edition of his band
Son Volt
, it's entirely obvious that this is
's work less than 30 seconds into the first track, "Promise the World."
's lineup has been fluid since
resurrected the band in 2005, but with
at the helm their musical personality has remained stable. The title
refers to his recent fascination with vintage rural blues that informed this batch of songs, but the lyrical fragments scavenged from ancient blues numbers and the bursts of slide guitar don't distract much from
's trademark roots rock attack.
is still a commanding vocalist, his guitar work remains powerful and muscular, and this new edition of
(
Mark Spencer
on bass, slide guitar, and piano,
Gary Hunt
on fiddle,
Jason Kardong
on pedal steel, and
Jacob Edwards
on drums) sounds taut and convincing. ~ Mark Deming