For the second time in three weeks, we bring you an album review
with bonus coverage of a live show. If you just like the studio experience, the
first half of this entry will appeal, and if you only like concert reviews it
will be the second half. Or just read the whole thing. Reading is good for you.
You know this, or you would not even be here.
Disc 1914 is…Broken Hearted Blue
Artist: Jenny Don’t & the Spurs
Year of Release: 2024
What’s up with the Cover? Jenny rocks the
cover with a determined look on her face that says, “see this guitar? I am
going to rock your world with it.”
How I Came To Know It: I like a lot of artists that are signed to a label called Fluff &
Gravy records (Alela Diane, Anna Tivel, Jeffrey Martin, Son of the Velvet Rat,
Margo Cilker), so one day when I was cruising around their website I started
looking into other artists that caught my eye. This was one of them. Turns out
it caught my ear as well.
How It Stacks Up: Having just picked up another album at
the merch table last night, I now have three
Jenny Don’t & the Spurs albums. “Broken Hearted Blue” comes in first place.
Ratings: 4 stars
Don’t expect something easily quantifiable on a Jenny Don’t &
the Spurs album. Their particular blend of cowpunk, surfer guitar and down-home
old-time country isn’t easily categorized, but that’s part of its charm.
On “Broken Hearted Blue” the band takes a step or two further into
the surf punk side of things than on previous releases, but they keep that complex
mix intact overall.
The album does a tasteful job of keeping all the tracks even in
the mix, and this lets your ear explore the soundscape of the band’s style as your
whim determines.
My lyric-focused heart started off gravitating to Jenny’s vocals,
which aren’t blow the doors down big, but have a magnetic tone, and are sneaky adaptable.
This allows her to pull songs in different directions. She can hit a high “beer
garden jamboree” in her head voice “You’re What I Need”, and a low but
dangerous half-whisper in “Jealous Heart”, and her creativity allows a
wide range of approaches to a song’s structure. Don’t was previously in a punk
band, and like Frank Turner, she turns this experience into just the right
amount of edge and danger to her singing when occasion demands.
Or maybe you’d prefer to follow along the surf/country stylings of
lead guitarist Christopher March. If so, there are plenty of offerings on that
front as well. The songs are short as befits the styles they draw from, but
never so short that they can’t make time and space for the mood-setting coolness
of a March solo. March plays with big round notes that evoke the vastness of an
ocean wave or the back forty of a cattle ranch with equal aplomb.
My favourite song on the record is “Unlucky Love”, which
has a bit of everything. It starts slow, with an almost eighties pop beat/bass
line, then enter the surf guitar and finally the best of Jenny Don’t’s vocals
you’ll find here or on any other record. On the opening lines of:
“I know it’s not me when you say you’re falling in love
I know it’s not me, it couldn’t be, I’m not the one”
She sounds vulnerable and sorrowful and ready to break your heart
into a thousand pieces, but the later refrain of:
“I’m just a fool
Unlucky in love
at least I’m something”
You catch a resilience underneath that’s hard as steel.
As befits its title, “Broken Hearted Blue” has a lot of exploration
of love lost, unrequited or simply rejected, but the record never feels maudlin
or sorry for itself. There’s a strength here, reflected in the way the songs
are structured, braided together like the strands of a steel cable, pliable but
powerful.
This layered impact sneaks up on you. On my first listen, “Broken
Hearted Blue” felt like a three-star record, and the junior partner to its more
traditional sounding predecessor, 2021’s “Fire on the Ridge” but the more I
listened the more it wrapped itself around me in all the right ways.
Best tracks: Pain in My Heart, Jealous Heart, Unlucky Love, Bones in the Sand
The Concert – Friday, April 3 at Lucky Bar, Victoria BC
I was pretty excited for this show, which I only found out about
by chance when I saw a poster in the local record store. Given the short notice
and niche sound, I thought this might appeal only to me, so I was much pleased
to find both my gal and four friends all came along!
Lucky Bar is a small venue, but it is one of the better places to
see a show in Victoria. The all-brick venue helps keep the sound from getting
too hot, and while there isn’t much seating for us olds, if you get there early
enough you can swing something. As it happens, we got there first and got the
best seat in the house. Right on the edge of the dance floor, and in full view
of the band. As the cowpunks say, “yeehaw!”.
Another note on the venue – two drinks cost me $12 with tip
which is roughly half of what it costs at most other places. Kudos to you,
Lucky Bar, for providing an affordable night out.
OK, on with the music.
Teenage Art Scene
The opening band was Teenage Art Scene. They were still doing
their sound check when we arrived, and while this is not usually a good sign,
it wasn’t their fault. If you are the first of two opening bands, you squeeze
in stage time where you can and usually have to suffer through someone else’s
sound board settings. Fret not – it’ll get better when you get higher on the
bill.
As for the music, the sound was a bit muddy and I couldn’t
understand any of the words of the songs. Again, likely not the band’s fault
(see aforementioned sound check challenges).
They played well, although their style of music (somewhere between
Weezer and Green Day) didn’t float my boat. They had some enthusiastic fans up
front that danced like demons and chanted “one more song” when the set ended.
That’s an impossibility for openers but I liked the energy.
My wife Sheila thought them good enough to buy both a t-shirt and
a CD, so I look forward to hearing them the way they likely want to be heard.
The Projectors
Next up, were the Projectors – a Victoria band getting some local
radio play I am told by those who listen to the radio (I do not).
Before I discuss the music, a big shout out to lead singer Dylan
Rysstad who graciously sold me Jenny Don’t merch at the booth, including taking
down the one medium band shirt left on the wall in the style I preferred. As it
happens, that shirt was for display only because it had a sizeable hole in it, which
I wouldn’t have even noticed until later except that Rysstad tracked me down in
the audience, and arranged to get it exchanged for another one. Rock and roll
is cool, but courtesy and honourable conduct are even cooler. Kudos!
As for the band, these guys played tight. Despite also be an
opening band they were not muddy at all, and lead singer Rysstad has an easy
natural phrasing to his delivery where you can hear every word clear as day.
The band’s music has a lot of sharp all-stops in the arrangements
and they landed every one right on the beat. The music was (to borrow an
observation from my friend Cat) a bit Interpol/Killers, and I would throw in a
soupcon of Fabulous Thunderbirds for good measure.
Jenny Don’t & the Spurs
At last, we arrived at the main event. Jenny Don’t & the Spurs
were one hell of a good time, and the free-flowing experience of a club or bar
venue like Lucky is the perfect place to experience them. Jenny makes it feel
like a party from the opening notes.
One of the challenges in a bar setting is catching the crowd’s
attention, and early in the set I was mildly irritated by the low rumble of
conversation going on in the back of the pub. This slowly died down through the
set – not through anything I did, but because Jenny Don’t’s enthusiasm drew
them in and shut them up with the best motivation there is – good music.
The sound was a bit overamped for the first couple of songs but
they got this fixed quickly. Jenny’s vocals felt a bit low in the mix for my
tastes, but the signature high peal when she’s at the top of her register cut
through the mix like a revelation.
Jenny has a smile that is infectious. At one point she announced
this was the band’s 999th show, and while this showed in their
mastery of the stage, the enthusiasm level made it feel like we were the only
show that ever mattered to them or ever would; an illusion every live show
should aspire to.
The setlist is exactly what I wanted, including two of my favourite
songs (“Fire on the Ridge” and “Unlucky Love”) back to back.
The band played as a cohesive unit, balancing each other’s energy
with the ease of seasoned professionals. On the left side of the stage the bass
player was going absolutely off the hook, staring imperiously god into the
audience like a rock god, and swinging his arm around like he was Pete
Townsend. He was also a wizard on the bass, hands and fingers flying through a dizzying
array of positions with an aggressive grace.
On the right, the guitar player hunkered down and played tasty licks
with nary a stage move, but with just as much skill and artistry but less theatricality.
In between, Jenny bounced between the two energies, pulling everything
together, occasionally pointing her guitar skyward like the cover of the album
review above – a signature move that seemed to shout “c’mon on in – the party’s
just getting started!”. She doubled down on the notion, toasting the audience with
a beer throughout the show in an infectious way the venue likely appreciated
with respect to bar sales.
It is at this point that I will sometimes gripe that the merch
table doesn’t have enough medium t-shirts. That was true this time as well, but
no gripe from me, because I was so well cared for. First by Dylan of the Projectors
and later Jenny herself, swapping for another option for me, and apologizing
for the mix up. She was as down to earth and approachable as anyone you’d meet,
despite being about 30 minutes away from hitting the stage like a hurricane.