I’ve been re-reading old fantasy
novels I’ve owned since I was a kid. Many are terrible, and that’s partly the
idea; demystify them makes it easier to get rid of them. Some are surprisingly
good, though. I’m on Volume Two of the six-volume Red Sonja series and it is
pretty great stuff. Those will be keepers. I apologize to my overloaded
library.
Disc 1128 is… The Civil Wars (Self-Titled)
Artist: The Civil
Wars
Year of Release: 2013
What’s up with the Cover? Some kind of atmospheric civil
war. I’m not sure if this is a cloud of ash from a fire or just one mean storm
system, but it looks all kinds of awesome.
How I Came To Know It: I had first discovered their 2011
album “Barton Hollow” and was digging through their discography. Turns out it
was just two albums, but I liked them both.
How It Stacks Up: I have two Civil Wars albums, which is all
there are ever going to be. Of those two I rank their self-titled effort #1. 2011’s
“Barton Hollow” gets more street cred, but I think their self-titled follow up
is consistently stronger.
Ratings: 3 stars but almost 4
The Civil Wars eponymous second album is bitter
sweet: sweet because of the magic between Joy Williams and John Paul White,
bitter because their second record would also prove to be their last. Tragic,
but at least no one died – they just went their separate ways.
While they were together they created some solid
indie folk music with a distinctive country flavour. Listening to this record
you get the impression these guys would’ve been embraced by Nashville if they’d
just been willing to stoop to a more saccharine pop sound. Thankfully, they
demurred.
Williams’ vocals have a bit more sweetness in her
tone (and when she calls on it, surprising power) and White provides a nice
grounding, with a natural gift for an emotionally honest delivery. Most of the
songs are either duets, harmonies or some combination of the two. Their
harmonies are often loose, letting their two voices play off one another, with
enough space in between that your ear can enjoy the differences.
There are a couple of occasions when they get caught
up in experimenting in how many different ways they can stretch this tension
and sacrifice the song’s melody in the process, but this is pretty rare and for
the most part I either forgave it, or at least appreciated the effort.
White also contributes on guitar. He isn’t a master,
but he is a versatile player who has a raw energy and a mellow strum. It feels
like a sotto voce whisper; deliberately soft around the edges but insistent on
being heard.
These songs are intimate explorations of the human
condition which manage to remain optimistic at their core, even though they are
often filled with heartache and doubt. “The
One that Got Away” and “Same Old Same
Old” are both songs about relationships in inexorable decay; collapsing
even as former lovers bemoan their loss.
The album’s best song is “Dust to Dust” a song with rounded production and a pop-infused folk
beat that reminded me of mid-eighties Bruce Springsteen, right before he went
too far into the Land of the Drum Machine. Amid a lot of songs about heartache
and poor choices, “Dust to Dust” is a
plea to the broken to let love in and see what happens:
“All your actin'
Your thin disguise
All your perfectly delivered lies
They don't fool me
You've been lonely, too long”
Your thin disguise
All your perfectly delivered lies
They don't fool me
You've been lonely, too long”
The vocals lightly rush the beat, capturing the
desperate insistence of those who want to let their walls down but have
forgotten how.
The album features a couple of covers. Etta James’ “Tell Mama” is OK, but I don’t know the
original so it is hard to compare. The band goes to great lengths to change the
Smashing Pumpkins’ “Disarm” into a
folk song and it works, but I still found myself preferring the original.
Overall, “The Civil Wars” is a solid record, not
afraid to cross genres and bare its soul while doing so. It takes a lot of
turns and it loses me at a few of them, but it is never boring and has some
songs that will seriously pull on your heartstrings.
Best
tracks: The One
That Got Away, Same Old Same Old, Dust to Dust, Devil’s Backbone, From this
Valley
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