Comes with a Smile # webexclusives
issues | the songs | interviews | reviews | images | web exclusives | top 10 | history | search
search

April 2006 / October 2005 / February-April 2005 / November-December 2004 / July 2004 / March-April 2004 / November-December 2003 / June-July 2003 / March-April 2003 / January-February 2003 / December 2002 / November 2002 / August 2002 / May-June 2002 / November 2001 / October 2001 / June-July 2001 / all web exclusives / search

Muzzlewhite | s/t (Big Dipper)
Disarmingly unpretentious roots-y rock from Muzzlewhite on their second full-length album yet. If perhaps a tad too self-effacing for its own good, this five-piece should still win over most non-believers willing to give them half a chance. The songwriting is lush and casual, the performances unassuming and shuffling, and Muzzlewhite bear more than a little resemblance to someone like Madrugada with some dubious Chris Rea references and creepy Lynchian moods added to the mix. First single My Hero, featuring guest vocalist Karen Jo Fields, is an absolute highlight, a beautiful slab of late-night, smoky country-blues, while This Safe Place opens like some long-lost Shadows gem before suddenly shifting gear and winds up as one of the finest moments one here. "When you say you don't want to die/I think it's half convention and half lie", they offers and it's probably a good thing that they're promising to lighten up a bit on their next one, due early next year.

Stein Haukland
November 2002

back