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The Bright Side of Down
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The Bright Side of Down
Current price: $17.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Bright Side of Down
Current price: $17.99
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Bright Side of Down
is singer and songwriter
John Gorka
's first set of new studio material since 2009's
So Dark You See
. Once more produced by
Rob Grenadek
, it features his regular band and some well-known friends.
Gorka
's work has developed along a particular line over the last two decades. He pays close attention to the details in his craft -- rhyme, musical economy, tight melodies -- and whether what's in a song is true to it. "Holed Up in Mason City," with its shuffling meld of acoustic and electric guitars, brushed drums, and accordion, is about the fate of enduring a pre-season blizzard. Told in the first person, musically it owes a small debt to
Richard Thompson
, which is hardly a bad thing.
Lucy Kaplansky
and
Eliza Gilkyson
contribute harmonies to the melancholy title track. While it's a sad song,
's protagonist never sounds as if he feels sorry for himself. "High Horse" is the reverse. He offers traces of bitter irony in the aftermath of a broken relationship and his protagonist intimates his health is failing while everything else is going to hell.
expresses empathy for his character, but he's not necessarily buying it. He delivers a fine reading of
Bill Morrissey
's "She's That Kind of Mystery." With sparse accompaniment,
finds the world-weariness in the author's intent, lets it come to the fore, and still manages to reveal the romantic magic in its core, thanks in part to
Amilia Spicer
's hovering backing vocal. Closer "Really Spring" is among the most tender songs that
's written, with a simple four-chord figure framed by the spectral yet irrepressible harmony vocal of
Antje Duvekot
. It captures the wistfulness of spring's past and the longing for its arrival and renewal, and the knowing that knowing winter always has one last trick up its sleeve.
should resonate with
's fans and those of modern American folk music. ~ Thom Jurek
is singer and songwriter
John Gorka
's first set of new studio material since 2009's
So Dark You See
. Once more produced by
Rob Grenadek
, it features his regular band and some well-known friends.
Gorka
's work has developed along a particular line over the last two decades. He pays close attention to the details in his craft -- rhyme, musical economy, tight melodies -- and whether what's in a song is true to it. "Holed Up in Mason City," with its shuffling meld of acoustic and electric guitars, brushed drums, and accordion, is about the fate of enduring a pre-season blizzard. Told in the first person, musically it owes a small debt to
Richard Thompson
, which is hardly a bad thing.
Lucy Kaplansky
and
Eliza Gilkyson
contribute harmonies to the melancholy title track. While it's a sad song,
's protagonist never sounds as if he feels sorry for himself. "High Horse" is the reverse. He offers traces of bitter irony in the aftermath of a broken relationship and his protagonist intimates his health is failing while everything else is going to hell.
expresses empathy for his character, but he's not necessarily buying it. He delivers a fine reading of
Bill Morrissey
's "She's That Kind of Mystery." With sparse accompaniment,
finds the world-weariness in the author's intent, lets it come to the fore, and still manages to reveal the romantic magic in its core, thanks in part to
Amilia Spicer
's hovering backing vocal. Closer "Really Spring" is among the most tender songs that
's written, with a simple four-chord figure framed by the spectral yet irrepressible harmony vocal of
Antje Duvekot
. It captures the wistfulness of spring's past and the longing for its arrival and renewal, and the knowing that knowing winter always has one last trick up its sleeve.
should resonate with
's fans and those of modern American folk music. ~ Thom Jurek