Eb & Sparrow – Eb & Sparrow (Home Alone) ALBUM REVIEW

 

“THE ONES THAT GOT AWAY” – A SHORT SERIES OF 2014 ALBUM REVIEWS THAT NEVER SAW THE LIGHT OF DAY, FOR SOME REASON.

 

451612-222093-34IT’S ALL ABOUT the throat.

Ebony Lamb has a voice that refuses to just tumble effortlessly out of her mouth, but needs coaxing. She’s been compared to Gillian Welch, but a much better comparison would be Janis Joplin after a hard night of partying on Southern Comfort. Janis Joplin singing a hybrid of folk and alt-country, that is.

Lamb’s voice, when it does roll out, sounds hard won and packs an emotive punch, and it’s what makes EB & Sparrow’s debut special. That, and the fact that the music here sounds natural and time-worn, like just about everything recorded at Lyttelton’s The Sitting Room studios with producer Ben Edwards – someone, give this guy an award.

There are old-time jazz and blues inflexions here, together with flourishes that suggest, rather than genuine Tex-Mex flavourings, too much time spent listening to old Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass records. That anachronistic and rather annoying trumpet is the one major weakness on a debut that sounds like a band that have been playing the traps for decades already. GARY STEEL

Sound = 3.5/5

Music = 3.5/5

 

Steel has been penning his pungent prose for 40 years for publications too numerous to mention, most of them consigned to the annals of history. He is Witchdoctor's Editor-In-Chief/Music and Film Editor. He has strong opinions and remains unrepentant. Steel's full bio can be found here

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