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The Jayhawks

Smile

  • AMG Review of Smile

    Amg
    John Duffy
    All Music Guide

    With Smile, the Jayhawks drop yet another sizable chunk of their alt-country sound by the roadside, adding in its place healthy doses of power pop and modern electronic music. Almost half of Smile's songs feature looped percussion, overdubbed drum tracks, or flat-out, funky backbeats. Little blips of sound skitter underneath the mostly acoustic guitars on the wistful "What Led Me to This Town" and make "Queen of the World" a worthy candidate for a dance remix (if the Jayhawks were ever to consider such a thing). Their second record since the departure of founder and leader Mark Olson, Smile is meant as a direct reaction to the pessimism of Sound of Lies, their underappreciated, moody offering from 1997. Ironically, with the charismatic Gary Louris now fronting the group alone, they sound more like a band than ever before. Despite the modern touches, though, the fact remains that Smile retains just enough of a distinctly Americana feeling. On the warm and twangy "Better Days," one of Louris' best songs in years, he sings with genuine regret and heartache the way he treated a long ago lover, and on "Break in the Clouds" he celebrates the comforts of domestic contentment, complete with pedal steel and soaring harmonies that recall the band's landmark work Hollywood Town Hall from 1992. The general shift in direction may alienate a few long-term fans, but much like friends Wilco achieved with their adventurous Summerteeth, Smile's modern touches may bring even more people into the band's orbit. What never changes on the Jayhawks' albums, it seems, are the blissful melodies and well-constructed tunes, and that may just be enough for even the toughest critics.

Paging Gram Parsons
over 2 years ago

I'm one of those making my way back to early 70s country rock by way of its influence on alt-county acts from Camper van Beethoven to Ryan Adams. It took Whiskeytown to get me over my fear of country-rock crossover, hatched, no doubt, from traumatic high-school memories of mullet-headed Camaro jockeys rocking The Eagles as the wellspring of all that is good and decent in the world.Finding the Flyi

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Paging Gram Parsons
over 2 years ago

I'm one of those making my way back to early 70s country rock by way of its influence on alt-county acts from Camper van Beethoven to Ryan Adams. It took Whiskeytown to get me over my fear of country-rock crossover, hatched, no doubt, from traumatic high-school memories of mullet-headed Camaro jockeys rocking The Eagles as the wellspring of all that is good and decent in the world.Finding the Flyi

More >

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