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Home / Articles / General / Tunes /  Preview to the Avett Brother’s CD, I and Love and You.
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Wednesday, September 16,2009

Preview to the Avett Brother’s CD, I and Love and You.

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Preview to the Avett Brother’s CD, I and Love and You. Release date Sept. 29, 2009

Since signing to record label American in July 2008, the Avett Brothers have not rested. They’ve been the opening act for Dave Matthews Band, recognized as a Best New Artist to Watch by Rolling Stone, graced the cover of Paste magazine, been approved by Oprah Winfrey, mentioned in Vanity Fair, extolled by writer John Grogan of Marley and Me and actor Rainn Wilson who plays Dwight Shrute on NBC’s “The Office.” Their new CD, I and Love and You, is the magnum opus that could catapult the Avett Brothers into notoriety with Grammy Award-winning producer Rick Rubin spit-shining and polishing harmonies and orchestrations to lip-smacking perfection. Paradoxically, the glory of worldly fame is not celebrated in I and Love and You. The onus to perform and the inevitable vicissitudes of success resonate in the lyrics, ruminations of weary travelers whose peregrinations have left them disillusioned and exhausted. Ten of the 13 songs lie heavy as wet wool blankets sodden with themes of self-doubt, loneliness and the ugliness of greed.

While Scott Avett plays banjo in only three songs, his twangy picking is distinctive and succinct. Joe Kwon delivers exemplarity cello performances as notes weave and linger with ethereal luminosity.

Seth Avett’s guitar adroitly channels velvety classics such as James Taylor’s “Fire and Rain.” And Bob Crawford’s thunking stand-up bass anchors the tracks.

The Avett Brother’s 2007 Ramseur Records produced CD, Emotionalism, serves as harbinger to I and Love and You. The title track implores Brooklyn to take them in, much as Emotionalism’s “Salina” where they are “down on their knees” for Kansas. A heavy piano solo, shades of the Beatles’ “Let It Be,” accompanied by a stellar cello performance by Joe Kwon opens the song. A return to more traditional Avett roots is Seth’s endearing love song, “January Wedding.” Scott’s banjo converses with guitar a la the prelude to “Dueling Banjos” before diving into a crashing crescendo of strings and snare. “Head Full of Doubt, Road Full of Promise” commences with a powerful hymnal style piano baseline and sinuous cello notes. Rat-a-tat drums shake the fourth track, “And It Spead.” Abruptly, the din is softened with gentle guitar and Seth’s sunny voice. “The Perfect Space” is part mournful symphony and part fullout rock with Scott’s wistful voice singing:

“I wanna have friends that I can trust that love me for the man I’ve become not the man that I was” “Ten Thousand Words” is a brilliant epic featuring heartwrenching chord changes and a light guitar melody. Seth’s impeccable harmony floats like a summer sheet over Scott’s gravely voice. With a signature chortle and caterwaul, Seth lightens the tone with “Kick Drum Heart.” He borrows a stuttering ruse from Emotionalism’s “Will You Return?” and a dash of Jamaicanlaced flavor from “Pretty Girl from San Diego.” Thump…thump thump thump….thump thump the song ends with the kick drum sounding like a heartbeat. While watching Scott whip the crowd into frenzy in a live show, beckoning with his arms to “take you all for a ride” is a very different experience than listening to the smoother more melodious version of “Laundry Room,” though it is no less titillating. The band kicks their heels up at the end in an unexpected hodown circa 2003 “Ill with Want” summons a piano funeral dirge with Scott conjuring shades of Gram Parsons.

“Tin Man” makes the cut to CD with it’s a smoothly orchestrated drum and guitar set. “Slight Figure of Speech” accelerates the mood with a fast paced guitar rhythm reminiscent of Elvis at a clambake with bikini-clad girls dancing the jerk. Inserted in the middle is a stattcato raptinged refrain similar to “Talk on Indolence” from Four Theives Gone — The Robbinsville Sessions. “It goes On and On” is Seth’s sincere sonnet imbued with a strong Darling influence (Seth recorded three CDs under the name Darling in the bedroom of his childhood home in Concord.) The last track, “Incomplete and Insecure,” features Scott’s voice serrated with discouragement accompanied in sympathy by Kwon’s cello. Scott’s reference to his insecure nature is in direct conflict to Emotionalism’s “I Would Be Sad” lyrics where he sings about his “easy confidence.” The Second Gleam’s song “Murdered in the City” is also given a nod to lyrics in this song where Scott acknowledges the value of family.

I haven’t finished a thing since I started my life/ I don’t feel much like starting now/ walking down lonely has worked like a charm I’m the only one I have to let down. Veteran Avett fans raise your arms in a collective cradle, a mosh pit to bolster Scott, Seth, Bob, and Joe. Then rejoice and wrap your arms around the new Avett Brother’s converts that I and Love and You will hook. Welcome them to Avett Nation, it’s the perfect space to gather and celebrate. !

  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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