Album Reviews
One
look at the cover of the latest album from longtime indie
favorites Starflyer 59 makes it pretty obvious that this
album is a return to their roots. With a solid off-blue
color and no text, the longtime Starflyer fan is
immediately reminded of the days of silver, gold, and
red. Of course, those days could never be returned to in
full, but Jason Martin and company make a pretty good go
at it here.
I
Am the Portuguese Blues
is ten tracks of highly listenable rock music. The
guitars are loud, the melodies are sweet, and the tunes
are cranked out. The closest comparison in the realm of
Starflyer is Americana, but this really isn't
noise rock. It seems to mix the pop sensibilities of Old
with the dark rock and roll joys of Americana.
This is something new, but at the same time, singer /
songwriter / guitarist Jason Martin has made it clear
that this album is just a sidetrip for the band.
But
it's quite a nice little sidetrip, that's to be sure.
There is not one song here to skip through. This is one
of the best examples of ear candy in recent history. It's
fun to listen to, but it's also really good. "Wake
Up Early" takes the album off to a blazing start
that doesn't let up during the 27 minute ride.
27
minutes? Yeah, that's the downfall here. The music is
great, but it really goes by fast. I'm pretty sure it's
just as much music as most Starflyer albums include, it's
just played a good bit faster. The lyrics can largely be
ignored. At least so far, I haven't picked up anything
that important. Honestly, this is just a rock out album.
Can I pick a favorite song? I've been addicted to
"Teens in Love" lately, but it is one highlight
among many.
I
Am the Portuguese Blues
exists mostly as a guilty pleasure, but good golly is it
pleasureful.
~ loconotion
Starflyer
59 is one of the most innovative bands in existance
today. Over the last 10 years, bandleader Jason Martin
and his revolving door of musicians have created
alternative rock masterpieces that all vary in sound and
texture.
The band's latest "I Am The Portuguese Blues"
is no exception. The material on this album was
originally intended to be recorded and released in 1997
after the band's "Americana" album but before
1998's "Fashion Focus". Now, seven years after
these songs were written, they are finally recorded and
released on this album.
With this album, Starflyer has stripped down their sound
to its basic elements of guitar, bass, drums and vocals
with absolutely no studio tricks or special effects. Yes
folks, this is a barebones Rock and Roll album. Tracks
such as "Wake Up Early", "UnLucky",
"Teens In Love" and "I Need Some
Help" have a style similar to 70s glam-rock acts
like T-Rex, Queen and David Bowie. "No
Revolution" sounds like a pure Black Sabbath track
with Jason Martin filling in for Ozzy. The instrumental
"Sound On Sound" has a definite Led
Zeppelin/jam-band quality to it. The remaining tracks are
loaded with ear-crunching guitar riffs that rank among
Jason Martin's very best. On previous Starflyer albums,
his guitar work is more fluid and restrained. On
"Portuguese Blues", he lets it all come loose
as if something he'd been keeping inside just erupted.
This is Starflyer 59's greatest album yet. A small
complaint would be the fact that this album only runs for
27-minutes total. However, considering the high musical
quality of this album, its short length hardly seems to
matter. Jason Martin and friends have undboubtedly
created another modern rock classic with "I Am The
Portuguese Blues".
Highly recommended.
(Continue)
Starflyer
59
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