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Or, The Whale
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Or, The Whale
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
Or, The Whale
Current price: $12.99
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Any rock band with a comma in their name is reaching uncomfortably far in the direction of the precious and the pretentious, and when the name in question is also a
Herman Melville
reference, the musicians aren't doing much to disprove this theory. The second album from San Francisco's
Or, The Whale
sounds significantly more down to earth than their moniker and its punctuation would lead you to believe, and their laid-back variety of dandified
country rock
is easy on the ears, but it also sounds like the work of cowboys whose boots haven't spent much time in the field. Writing a song about Jimson Weed in which no one vomits or passes out (
"Datura"
) suggests a certain lack of familiarity with your subject matter, and
"Shasta"
doesn't seem to have anything to do with either the soft drink or the mountain, once again calling the group's lyrical perspective into question. But if
's songs don't always ring true, the melodies are strong and engaging, and vocalists
Lindsay Garfield
and
Julie Ann Thomasson
make the most of the material (
Matt Sartain
Alex Robins
aren't quite as impressive as front en, but they hardly embarrass themselves, either.) The picking and harmonies from the seven members of
is quite good, with high marks going to
Tim Marcus
at the pedal steel, and after a decade of
alt-country
bands trying to make like a cross between
Merle Haggard
Social Distortion
, the notion of an act who sound like a pack of grad students going back in time so they can open for
the New Riders of the Purple Sage
is at least novel. But
doesn't seem to have a whole lot of heart to go along with their chops and imagination, and with this kind of music, that's a flaw all the harmonies in the world can't fix. ~ Mark Deming
Herman Melville
reference, the musicians aren't doing much to disprove this theory. The second album from San Francisco's
Or, The Whale
sounds significantly more down to earth than their moniker and its punctuation would lead you to believe, and their laid-back variety of dandified
country rock
is easy on the ears, but it also sounds like the work of cowboys whose boots haven't spent much time in the field. Writing a song about Jimson Weed in which no one vomits or passes out (
"Datura"
) suggests a certain lack of familiarity with your subject matter, and
"Shasta"
doesn't seem to have anything to do with either the soft drink or the mountain, once again calling the group's lyrical perspective into question. But if
's songs don't always ring true, the melodies are strong and engaging, and vocalists
Lindsay Garfield
and
Julie Ann Thomasson
make the most of the material (
Matt Sartain
Alex Robins
aren't quite as impressive as front en, but they hardly embarrass themselves, either.) The picking and harmonies from the seven members of
is quite good, with high marks going to
Tim Marcus
at the pedal steel, and after a decade of
alt-country
bands trying to make like a cross between
Merle Haggard
Social Distortion
, the notion of an act who sound like a pack of grad students going back in time so they can open for
the New Riders of the Purple Sage
is at least novel. But
doesn't seem to have a whole lot of heart to go along with their chops and imagination, and with this kind of music, that's a flaw all the harmonies in the world can't fix. ~ Mark Deming