Luther Russell - The Invisible Audience (2011/2020)
BAND/ARTIST: Luther Russell
- Title: The Invisible Audience
- Year Of Release: 2011/2020
- Label: Ungawa
- Genre: Folk, Rock, Power Pop, Singer-Songwriter
- Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 75:06 min
- Total Size: 184 / 489 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Still Life Radio
02. Sidekick Reverb
03. Better off Dead
04. A World Unknown
05. Nothing to See Here
06. Halfway
07. Motorbike
08. Everything You Do
09. 1st & Main
10. Dead Sun Blues
11. Ain't Frightening Me
12. Somewhere in Between
13. Tomorrow's Papers
14. Anyone
15. Et Al
16. Broken Baskets
17. Trying
18. On the Other Side
19. Long Lost Friend
20. 109th & Madison
21. Traces
22. Ok Already
23. In This Time
24. So Long
25. Elder Green Blues
01. Still Life Radio
02. Sidekick Reverb
03. Better off Dead
04. A World Unknown
05. Nothing to See Here
06. Halfway
07. Motorbike
08. Everything You Do
09. 1st & Main
10. Dead Sun Blues
11. Ain't Frightening Me
12. Somewhere in Between
13. Tomorrow's Papers
14. Anyone
15. Et Al
16. Broken Baskets
17. Trying
18. On the Other Side
19. Long Lost Friend
20. 109th & Madison
21. Traces
22. Ok Already
23. In This Time
24. So Long
25. Elder Green Blues
Luther Russell has melody running through his veins. He probably has key changes instead of most normal bodily functions. Middle eights? He shits 'em.
Good breeding is the key here: Russell is the grandson of legendary lyricist Bob Russell, who collaborated with Duke Ellington and Quincy Jones and whose credits include 'Brazil' and 'He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother' to name but two; he's also grand-nephew of the equally respected Broadway composer Bud Green ('Alabamy Bound', 'Sentimental Journey' etc) and has a whole family tree of similarly creative individuals. Luther has honed his craft as a producer and sideman for Sarabeth Tucek and Richmond Fontaine among others, as well as writing and recording his own material in similar rootsy vein.
So it's kind of a given that The Invisible Audience - Russell's fifth solo LP - is firmly in the classic tradition. Reviewing it on the basis of whether it breaks new ground (it doesn't) would be missing the point, as it makes no claim to be avant-garde. The question instead is whether it can still sound fresh despite being constructed from essentially the same ingredients as a million other records. It's whether it tweaks the formula just enough to drag an emotional response from a listener inured to decades of manipulative rock and pop clichés. It's whether it balances craft with spontaneity, leaving just enough space for the listener's own imagination to take over and weave their own story between the notes. This is the invisible audience: you and I, the only ones who can make a record like this complete and meaningful, by bringing it into our lives and investing each song with a little piece of our own memory, our half-remembered dreams and private regrets.
Not every song can carry this emotional weight, but Russell knows exactly how to work it. One effective element is to communicate a kind of yearning, and indeed a sense of loss infuses each of the 25 songs on this sprawling double album in one way or another. It's in the raw glam rock of 'Sidekick Reverb', a producer's paean to damaged and distorted speakers as a metaphor for dysfunctional love, as much as in the Elliot Smith-like walking blues of 'Better Off Dead' or the understated but quietly devastating ballad 'In This Time'. Love lost and the passing of youth are the explicit themes, but between the lines there's also an unspoken mourning for a vanishing America, a nation founded by ambitious immigrants like Russell's own forebears, chasing a dream of freedom and a simplicity of life that's long since been sold down the river by the big corporations and powerful cabals.
Good breeding is the key here: Russell is the grandson of legendary lyricist Bob Russell, who collaborated with Duke Ellington and Quincy Jones and whose credits include 'Brazil' and 'He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother' to name but two; he's also grand-nephew of the equally respected Broadway composer Bud Green ('Alabamy Bound', 'Sentimental Journey' etc) and has a whole family tree of similarly creative individuals. Luther has honed his craft as a producer and sideman for Sarabeth Tucek and Richmond Fontaine among others, as well as writing and recording his own material in similar rootsy vein.
So it's kind of a given that The Invisible Audience - Russell's fifth solo LP - is firmly in the classic tradition. Reviewing it on the basis of whether it breaks new ground (it doesn't) would be missing the point, as it makes no claim to be avant-garde. The question instead is whether it can still sound fresh despite being constructed from essentially the same ingredients as a million other records. It's whether it tweaks the formula just enough to drag an emotional response from a listener inured to decades of manipulative rock and pop clichés. It's whether it balances craft with spontaneity, leaving just enough space for the listener's own imagination to take over and weave their own story between the notes. This is the invisible audience: you and I, the only ones who can make a record like this complete and meaningful, by bringing it into our lives and investing each song with a little piece of our own memory, our half-remembered dreams and private regrets.
Not every song can carry this emotional weight, but Russell knows exactly how to work it. One effective element is to communicate a kind of yearning, and indeed a sense of loss infuses each of the 25 songs on this sprawling double album in one way or another. It's in the raw glam rock of 'Sidekick Reverb', a producer's paean to damaged and distorted speakers as a metaphor for dysfunctional love, as much as in the Elliot Smith-like walking blues of 'Better Off Dead' or the understated but quietly devastating ballad 'In This Time'. Love lost and the passing of youth are the explicit themes, but between the lines there's also an unspoken mourning for a vanishing America, a nation founded by ambitious immigrants like Russell's own forebears, chasing a dream of freedom and a simplicity of life that's long since been sold down the river by the big corporations and powerful cabals.
Year 2020 | Pop | Folk | Rock | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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