Blackwood Company – Forbidden Fruit
I once had to make the agonizing drive from Houston to Los
Angeles in one sitting. From the
grueling scorch of land between San Antonio and El Paso through the mind hell
that is Arizona, I really wish that I had Blackwood Company's debut
album Forbidden Fruit with me.
The album begins with a fluttery synth and a distant guitar, and as soon
as the first song drops in you immediately feel that you should be driving
cross-country in a convertible with the wind in your hair.
At first listen, you would definitely think that Blackwood
Company offers light sunny upbeat fare that is swathe in diverse
musicianship and crafty guitar solos.
This is due in part because of the bright acoustic guitars and melodic
vocal harmonies, but upon closer inspection, you realize that the songs have a
slightly darker presence that belies their upbeat feel. Forbidden Fruit took the better part
of a year for singer/songwriter John Stuart and guitarist Stephen
"Sven" Shirl to write and record. John handled most of the song writing duties on his acoustic
guitar, and it is the songwriting by far that makes the album so
enjoyable. Don't get it twisted, Sven
can rip a guitar solo and Dan Hassay is a monster on drums, but the songwriting
is both crafty and personal, yet deeply melancholy and entertaining and is the
heart that pulls you into the songs.
In "Indie Blues Pt. 1" John bemoans, 'It’s
hard as hell playing to an empty room/Told the manager all my fans’ll be here
soon," which every local band in Houston can at one time relate to. He cleverly tells of the traps and pitfalls
that is the local music scene, and the problems that confront probably every
band at one time or another. Then
there's the scathing admonition of Fred Phelps in the song, '"Reverend
Phelps" where John reminds the reverend, '"Reverend Phelps, God don’t
hate a soul he made/Even demagogues who decry gay pride parades."
There is definitely more than a hint of Beck here and
a touch of Liz Phair, which John openly admits were an influence. The album also has a mildly erratic
nature. You will hear keyboards and
synths in one song to a didgeridoo on their instrumental track '"When the
Bees Go…." The songs will swing from a pop acoustic feel to rockabilly to
bluesy love ballads. Nevertheless, the
diverseness is never distracting and the album never loses the cohesive
character that John and Sven stamp on it.
If anything, it just feels more an extension of who John and Sven are as
musicians and probably a byproduct of listening to too much Beck.
So anytime
you have the notion of making a 22-hour nonstop trip across the country, be
sure to take Blackwood Company with you.
I even hear that John will play acoustic in your back seat.
(Blackwood
Company – www.myspace.com/blackwoodcomp
On Sage At Amazon -
http://www.amazon.com/Forbidden-Fruit-Blackwood-Company/dp/B001EN405I/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=music&qid=1244475334&sr=1-1)