Phonograph : Phonograph

<a href="Reviews/Album_Reviews/Bracken_%3A_We_Know_About_The_Need/"><img src="http://www.qromag.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/phonograph.jpg" alt=" " /></a> New York isn't the first place you'd look for good ol', twangy American rock, but Brooklyn's Phonograph has created a fine collection of...
7.7 Arclight Recordings
2007 

 New York isn't the first place you'd look for good ol', twangy American rock, but Brooklyn's Phonograph has created a fine collection of the rambling, countrified sound that might just surprise you.   Their self-titled debut conjures barbed wire, barns, and highways that go flat for miles.  Acoustic-based, electrically-charged balladry with a slouched posture fills the album solidly from beginning to end that's surprising in several ways.

What makes Phonograph's debut significant is a sense of raw honesty in the way they sound like something from 30 years ago.  They're not doing it for fashion or attention, and it's refreshing.  Their laid-back, rural feel is at the core.  With a seemingly familiar drawl, singer Matthew Welsh contrasts the pace of the breezy music with a slower cadence that feels like a steady rain shower, not another storm.  

Phonograph is a complete album, with nice variations on a central theme: working-class rock.  You can't help but envision farmland while listening to it, with all of the stoic toe-tapping and country/western strains.  "Have I Told You" has a steady giddy-up beat and plaintive narrative similar to a lot of songs that started off at hoedowns or campfires.  "Parsons White" is a little more poignant while "In Your Mind" is more danceable.  Overall, the album swerves around this style pretty thoroughly and entertainingly.

For a Brooklyn band's debut, Phonograph is a refreshingly authentic sound of the American heartland.  You might expect a song to appear on a Chevy commercial, if they weren't busy with more generic tunes.  This album is a good reminder of where rural American rock came from and why it's still around.  

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