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The Pet Parade
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The Pet Parade
Current price: $13.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Pet Parade
Current price: $13.99
Size: CD
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Arriving 20 years after
Fruit Bats
' debut album,
The Pet Parade
finds project leader
Eric D. Johnson
collaborating with producer and
Bonny Light Horseman
colleague
Josh Kaufman
and instrumentalists including keyboardist
Thomas Bartlett
,
Iron & Wine
violinist
Jim Becker
, and drummers
Joe Russo
(
Kevin Morby
Cass McCombs
) and
Matt Barrick
Fleet Foxes
the Walkmen
). A typically affable and bittersweet outing for
Johnson
, it was written before the COVID-19 pandemic forced the musicians to record it primarily remotely in various home studios. Despite that detail, the album carries a reliably loose, breezy demeanor within full-band arrangements, including on opening track "The Pet Parade." Inspired by the memory of actual pet parades held in his grandmother's hometown, it explores themes of the passage of time and life with minimal chord movement and repeated lyrics like "Here we are, once again here" and "It feels like it's been years." Meanwhile, it sets a sonic template with warm acoustic guitar, pedal steel, and a sauntering rhythm section, eventually adding touches of fiddle, vintage keys, and vocal harmonies. Though much of the album follows that song's gait,
picks up the tempo on the more urgent, still wistful "The Balcony." It again addresses time and transitions while homing in on isolation ("Now alone again as usual/Out on the balcony"). Elsewhere, "Holy Rose" takes on a bluesier hue, and "Complete" closes the set on a stripped-down, consoling acoustic guitar ballad that insists, "But you shall be complete/I decree it so." If
doesn't break new ground, it does offer comfort and compassion wrapped in a honeyed, effortless indie folk that honors the project's now-long tenure. ~ Marcy Donelson
Fruit Bats
' debut album,
The Pet Parade
finds project leader
Eric D. Johnson
collaborating with producer and
Bonny Light Horseman
colleague
Josh Kaufman
and instrumentalists including keyboardist
Thomas Bartlett
,
Iron & Wine
violinist
Jim Becker
, and drummers
Joe Russo
(
Kevin Morby
Cass McCombs
) and
Matt Barrick
Fleet Foxes
the Walkmen
). A typically affable and bittersweet outing for
Johnson
, it was written before the COVID-19 pandemic forced the musicians to record it primarily remotely in various home studios. Despite that detail, the album carries a reliably loose, breezy demeanor within full-band arrangements, including on opening track "The Pet Parade." Inspired by the memory of actual pet parades held in his grandmother's hometown, it explores themes of the passage of time and life with minimal chord movement and repeated lyrics like "Here we are, once again here" and "It feels like it's been years." Meanwhile, it sets a sonic template with warm acoustic guitar, pedal steel, and a sauntering rhythm section, eventually adding touches of fiddle, vintage keys, and vocal harmonies. Though much of the album follows that song's gait,
picks up the tempo on the more urgent, still wistful "The Balcony." It again addresses time and transitions while homing in on isolation ("Now alone again as usual/Out on the balcony"). Elsewhere, "Holy Rose" takes on a bluesier hue, and "Complete" closes the set on a stripped-down, consoling acoustic guitar ballad that insists, "But you shall be complete/I decree it so." If
doesn't break new ground, it does offer comfort and compassion wrapped in a honeyed, effortless indie folk that honors the project's now-long tenure. ~ Marcy Donelson