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Chicago, Illinois
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| JOE MANNIX - WHITE
FLAG |
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Joe Mannix's "White
Flag" starts out with an amazing one-two punch.
The first song, "Silver Girl," has
such soaring beauty that it's hard to stop listening to it and move
on to the rest of the record. But you should, since #2,
"Bellrose Hill," is strummy
toe-tapper with an irresistible refrain. This is a beautifully
produced (by Glenn Marshall, a student of Daniel Lanois) album that
showcases Mannix's tuneful voice and wistful, melancholic songs. Mannix
has a light, almost familiar voice, but he throws it all over the
melodic range in such a fearless, all-out way that you're smitten.
"Do you still live in that big open room / do you still keep
those secrets from the world?" he asks an old acquaintance on
"Silver Girl." "Do you still cry yourself to sleep
at night / do you still love the rain, silver girl?" This heartbreaking
stanza stands out for its melodic beauty as well as its creation,
with a few lyrical strokes, of a vivid character something
Lucinda Williams used to do brilliantly, but seems to have moved away
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"Light After the Darkness" is spare and
eloquent. The acoustic guitar sounds dry and crunchy, with Mannix's
voice, full and emotional, backed by a quiet piano. "Bamboo"
hits some of the same notes and emotional territory as "Silver
Girl," but a few lyrical slack spots make the song less of
a knockout. Similarly, "Higher Intervention" seems to
be too smooth for its own subject matter "I'm running
out of desperate things to do" is a great line, but the song's
charging, rocky feel and easy lyrics ("Lady Luck has passed
me by") keep the emotion from cresting.
Mannix's singing has been
compared to Neil Finn's and Michael Penn's, but Mark
Eitzel should be mentioned too the two singers both use an
effective, honest wail. Mannix's sound is more squarely in the folk-rock
tradition than Eitzel's a website describes him as "Phil
Ochs meets PF Sloan with The Band." His album has its share
of rockers, like the title track, "White Flag," showing
characteristic melodic flair. "Last Gang in Town" has
a Celtic drone behind its catchy chorus. The
collection as a whole is an unabashedly pretty and well-recorded
throwback to the folk-pop tradition of the 1970s.
By Kristy Eldredge, October 13, 2003.
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