“Keep On Loving Each Other” is available for streaming and download on Poi Dog Pondering’s Bandcamp page. Give the album a listen and see what you think. Contrary opinions, however, are encouraged. This isn’t to say that there aren’t genuine pleasures in the album’s final five tunes-“The Rome Song” is a lovely guitar ballad with some gorgeously evocative strings, the baroque intro to “Licked All the Sugar” is exquisitely pretty and the disco-inflected title track features the album’s sharpest lyrics (“I was distracted doing some casual research / On a glass of wine at the dining room table”)-but in general, Side B (I’m going to just call it that because I can) is juuuust sufficiently more diffuse in its pleasures that I find myself-for the time being, anyway-a Side A guy. At this writing, “Keep On Loving Each Other” is only available digitally, but if it ever does have an LP incarnation, I’m guessing its listeners might act as here described. As someone who grew up listening exclusively to vinyl (because that’s pretty much all there was), I can faithfully attest to the phenomenon, not uncommon, of becoming so enamored of a certain album’s Side A that its Side B became a bit of a wallflower, the platter rarely, if ever, getting flipped. Then “Bespeckled Angel” seriously switches up the genre-borrowing it’s a driving folk-rock ballad, with some wonderfully evocative lyrics.Īs I said at the top, the album hits some nostalgic trigger points-and one of them, for me, was entirely unexpected. It’s got a sweetly strutting rhythm, a bouncing, descending horn line and a smooth trumpet solo. “Tender Little Heart” wafts in with a straight-up soul-pop vibe-beginning with a crooned “Oooh baby” that knocks you back decades. The songwriting is topflight there’s a chord shift midway that opens onto an exhilarating bridge, and additional ravishing changes follow in “Sweet Taste in My Mouth,” which features a more layered arrangement and some lovely, yearning horns. “Free & Easy” has an almost yacht-rock feel, with, again, a small complement of additional players (I particularly liked what I heard of Paul Von Mertens’ flute). Orrall sings, “I’m not afraid to start over / I am no stranger to manual labor”-the only reference to his recent bottoming out, and not remotely a self-pitying one-then launches into an irresistibly catchy exhortation to “Stand up / Speak your mind / Follow your heart / Try to be kind.” It’s a hoary old hippie refrain, but-maybe it’s the times-it now sounds so urgent and so important, and Orrall is clearly not just sincere, but ecstatically so. The opener, “Do It Your Own Way,” immediately impresses with the fullness of its sound after a jaunty guitar intro, we get horns and strings, plus a chorus of backup vocalists. And here they graze contentedly all over the genre dial. The only difference, to my hearing, is a kind of joyous self-confidence that radiates from the very first track these guys seem to have figured out that free spirits don’t need to fit into a brand “free spirits” is a brand. If you go into the new album expecting any of those travails and hardships to tell in the band’s new tunes, you’re in for a surprise because “Keep On Loving Each Other” is, as the title suggests, as buoyant, bright and relaxed as anything Poi Dog has ever done. Come COVID, things got so bad that the band’s frontman, Frank Orrall, found himself taking construction jobs and working as a handyman. That didn’t serve them well in the great tumult that shook the music world in the nineties (and whose fallout we’re still feeling), and while Poi Dog continued to record (no longer for a major label), it never really managed to hit the national zeitgeist in the way it had at its debut. As a result, the band’s sound became as peripatetic as the actual band (who came to Chicago by way of Waikiki and Austin). And Poi Dog remained true to that counterculture nonchalance, even when it was signed to Columbia Records, embracing whatever groove came along to inspire them rather than hone a distinctive personality and nail down a brand. Even when it first emerged on the scene in the very late eighties, Poi Dog was a breezy, shaggy callback to the kind of sun-soaked, melody-driven hippie fare that had ruled the airwaves twenty years before. It should come as no surprise that the new full-length by Poi Dog Pondering-the band’s tenth studio album and its first in five years-should trigger nostalgic responses.
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