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FROG HOLLER
Railings
Record Cellar
To catch the full Frog Holler vibe,
you'll need to see the Philly combo in a crowded honk. The group has a growing
rep as a killer live band, whereas the studio albums, as good as they are,
have gotten progressivley more polished.
Railings, their fourth disc, takes a slow-paced tack in order to give the
listeners the entire sonic picture. That's not a criticism, incidentally,
and anyway, a handful of tracks here, while performed with nuance and deliberation,
do kick out the proverbial jams, notably the baroque-grass rocker "What
Went Down", which finds songwriter/vocalist Darren Schlappich ruminating
on ill intentions and dark deeds (You lie and cheat/How do you sleep/knowing
what went down") against a thick backdrop of fuzztone pedal steel and
twangy guitar arpeggios
For the most part, however, the reins remain pulled steady. Instructive tracks
include an expansive Band-like slow waltz ("Unlock The Door", featuring
elegant keyboards); a harmony-strewn slice of latter day Byrds (the quirky/spicy
love story "Virginia", made spicier by a guest fiddle player); and
a loping cosmic cowboy ditty with steel, banjo, acoustic guitar, brushed drums
("About Time") that concerns itself with neopacifism and nurturing
one's spiritual center.
All in all, the vibe is contemplative, autumnal even, which makes it a perfect
disc to spin as the sun grows short and the leaves begin to turn. - Fred
Mills
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