SOUL-JUNK
1960 (SOUNDS FAMILYRE)
It's only fitting that for SOUL-JUNK's auspicious "1960" release, the stylistically dizzying San Diego-based band has returned to the comfy confines of Sounds Familyre, home of their musically adventurous cross-continental kinfolk DANIELSON.
Recorded at DANIELSON's New Jerusalem Recreation Room studio in South Jersey and co-produced by Glen Galloway and Daniel C.
Smith, "1960" is S-J's eleventh album -- as in, counting upwards since their 1995 debut long-player "1950", and aside from the numerous EPs, singles and fruitful collaborations along the way.
But don't sweat the arithmetique. Although numbers have their significant role, the decidedly family affair that is "1960" ultimately concerns letters, which lead to words, which leads to The Word -- which, as it is written, came before the rest anyway...
This indeed means actual Biblical text. Specifically, from The Book of Psalms (New King James Version).
In the grand tradition of classical composers both older -- Vivaldi, Bach, Mozart -- and more recent -- Charles Ives, Igor Stravinsky, Leonard Bernstein -- as well as a handful of discerning popular artists from U2 to the dubbed-out Prince Far I, SOUL-JUNK has returned to the rich inspiration of the Bible's "Songs of Praise." SOUL-JUNK's "1959" album (2007) featured group mainstay Glen Galaxy singing the first 23 of the book's 150 psalms, a solo outing except for a touch of vox from his four-year-old daughter Mila.
Like past S-J fare, Galaxy voiced over a diverse collection of original instrumentation, tuneful delvings in off-kilter indie rock, lo-fi folk, and open-ended hip hop, all informed by a genre-transcending liberty.
"1960" pushes everything further while narrowing the scriptural focus: Psalm 119, the longest of all, 176 lines, eight for each of its 22 sections -- which are designated in order by, respectively, each of the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet.
The lyrics for each of "1960"'s 22 tracks are drawn verbatim from its respective part of Psalm 119.
How Galaxy ardently phrases the verbiage in distinct melodic songcraft -- lingering on a line for its transitional capability, emphasizing another for its inherent catchy power-chorus effect -- this is where the creativity poured into each song begins to elevate all.
Although repeatedly, massively, fervently rocking out more often than any SOUL-JUNK record in years, "1960"'s crystalline/inventively fuzzified electric guitars and pounding drums tell only part of the sound-story.
Having enlisted over a dozen S-J members through the years, vocalist-guitarist Galaxy is joined by eight others here for a suitably large-scale SOUL-JUNK ensemble.
Completing the core power-trio, there is thunderous bass from the moonlighting Emil Nikolaisen, guitar-playing front man for Norway's Serena Maneesh.
There is spirited keyboard from Portland, OR's soulful Todd Fadel. There is ample cello from Jie Jin, a prized classical player active throughout the Delaware Valley and beyond.
There is marimba and additional guitar from Joshua Stamper, a DANIELSON member whose overall charting/arranging skills were tellingly engaged.
And there are those voices -- family voices. DANIELSON FAMILE ringleader Daniel Smith is joined by his wife Elin Smith and father Lenny Smith in singing out/harmonizing along.
And contributing some colorful album artwork, there is Glen's son Jude, who joins his dad on stage these days as an estimable teen trapsman.
The Word, sound, vision -- family: SOUL-JUNK's "1960".