The Avett Brothers - True Sadness
There's a melancholy to the title of the Avett Brothers' 2016 album True Sadness,
but the album's tone doesn't mirror its name. Certainly, there's a bit
of a sorrowful undercurrent, something that surfaces on "Divorce
Separation Blues," but often there's a buoyancy to the music's spirit, a
lightness that's evident even in the burnished bluegrass ballads, tunes
where the harmonies and plucked strings combine into a sense of
sweetness. Always throwbacks at heart, the Avett Brothers
temper their rough-hewn retro affectations by brightening the corners
with hints of electronic rhythms and polish, a sly update executed with
precision by Rick Rubin. Despite this breezy modern air, the Avett Brothers and Rubin
alike are on firmer ground when the amplifiers are cranked just loud
enough to growl and the rhythms lumber along with the slow, hazy crawl
of Southern rock. This heavier attack distinguishes the Avett Brothers
from the ranks of standard-issue Americana -- a genre where austere
authenticity often matters more than gut-level force -- but what
distinguishes True Sadness from previous Avett
albums is how this force intermingles with lighter moments. Sometimes
this airiness is evident in ballads that indeed carry a melancholic
pull; sometimes the levity derives from those camouflaged electronic
elements, moments that play like sun drifting in from parted clouds.
Tonally, these seemingly conflicted feelings match because they play
like the sadness is slowly lifting away. Far from being an album for
wallowing in the depths of grief, True Sadness is a record about the emergence of hope.
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