At the start of Dawes' fourth studio effort, 2015's All Your Favorite Bands, lead singer Taylor Goldsmith
kicks off the sanguine opener "Things Happen" by admitting "I could go
on talking, or I could stop/Wring out each memory til I get every drop."
This sentiment, ripe with a post-breakup emotional stew of yearning,
anger, and eventual acceptance, colors all the tracks on this tight,
impeccably crafted album. Influenced by the passionate '70s country-rock
and singer/songwriter sound of artists like Jackson Browne and groups like the Band, Los Angeles' Dawes
have quietly built a loyal following with their own brand of memorable
and often poignant folk-rock. Produced by journeyman composer and
guitarist David Rawlings (Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, the Decemberists) at Nashville's Woodland Studios, All Your Favorite Bands has a warm, organic texture that's at once raw and immediate, sophisticated and polished. It's perhaps the closest Dawes
has come to capturing their live sound. Each song is performed with an
intimate, personal intensity, making it feel like they’re playing it
only for you. Cuts like the urgent, minor-key "I Can't Think About It
Now," with its gospel-style female backing vocals, and the
heartbreakingly honest "Waiting for Your Call" are rootsy anthems that
combine Goldsmith's poetic, literate lyrics, crisp vocal harmonies, and evocative, Dire Straits-influenced
guitars with the hushed ripple of a Hammond organ. These songs, while
efficiently constructed, have plenty of breathing room -- there are
actual guitar solos here, and jazz-like drum accents. Of course, a big
part of what makes Dawes' songs so palpable is Goldsmith's
knack for highlighting those often mundane details in life that
initially seem insignificant, but take on greater meaning in hindsight.
On the title track he sings "When I think of you, you've still got on
that hat that says 'Let's Party'/I hope that thing is never thrown
away," and later, "I hope your brother's El Camino runs forever."
Although most likely directed at a former flame, with the song's
insistent, piano-driven vibe it sometimes feels more like a message of
goodwill toward the band's own fans. Similarly, on the ruminative
breakup number "Don't Send Me Away," Goldsmith
transforms his car into a mausoleum of regret with the line "I'm
getting on the freeway/Your jacket's in my car/Your ashes in my
ashtray/And I'm there with you, wherever you are." It's this gift for
capturing intangible longing that drives much of All Your Favorite Bands. Goldsmith
perhaps expresses this the best on the tragic ballad "To Be Completely
Honest." He sings "I think I know how it ends/The universe continues
expanding while we discuss particulars of just being friends/And maybe
that makes everything okay/Your memory the defect at the heart of every
promise." Ultimately, All Your Favorite Bands
is a comforting album, leaving you with the notion that whatever
happens in your life, good, bad, or indifferent, all things take on a
beautiful if bittersweet meaning when viewed through the rear-view
mirror.
Saturday, August 15, 2015
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