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A while
back, Philip "Swill" Odgers of the Men They Couldn't Hang
decided that he wanted to produce an album that was under
his control from start to finish. The Day After is
the result. Using lyrics provided by fellow TMTCH member Paul
Simmonds (for the majority -- but not all -- of the songs)
and acoustic instruments, Swill and his guest musicians (the
Swaggerband) recorded these 13 tracks. The Swaggerband didn't
get together to rehearse beforehand, but they stayed in the
studio until they got it right.
Of the
tunes, I think my favorite would have to be the title track,
"The Day After," a cheery, bouncy little ditty about how even
though it's the day after the end of the world, the singer
is in love, so everything's great.
"In the
Jailhouse Now" stands out because of the ukulele accompaniment
(played by Jamie Mathews) and the yodeling chorus, which gives
the tune an old-time country air, as though it wouldn't have
been out of place to be performed on Hee-Haw. The infectious
beat of the one instrumental piece, "The Hanwell Shuffle,"
makes for a fingers-tapping-on-keyboard, chair-dancing good
tune.
There
is a certain sameness to each track; the tunes are quite melodic
-- some are melodic and cheery, some melodic and sad. Except
for the plinking ukulele of "In the Jailhouse Now," Swill's
singing is accompanied by rolling guitar with occasional violin
and harmonica ornamentation. The tempo of each song varies
little from each other song. This produces a consistency from
track to track, so that nothing here sounds out of place or
causes the listener to sit up in alarm, wondering, "What the
heck were they thinking with this?"
It would
have been nice to have the lyrics for each song included in
the liner notes; I'm not necessarily a genius when it comes
to picking out lyrics, and even with repeated listening I
missed a great deal of "The Story" and "Lost in the Flood."
There
are few CDs that make my workday rotation; The Day After will
be one of them.
- Rambles
written by Laurie Thayer
published 22 January 2005
Source:
Rambles.net,
22-Jan-2005
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