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Written
by Larry Robertson, posted by blog admin
Black
Bluebird’s announces their potential in a big way with their release Like Blood for Music, a powerful ten
song collection. The power trio comes from a traditional hub for inventive
music, Minneapolis, and is joined by a couple of talented contributors to help
this release come off as one of the more impressive in recent memory – either on
the mainstream or indie scene. Offering themselves up as a sort of genre
hybrid, melding elements of pop with darker overtones, including dissonant
edges shaping their music, Black Bluebirds provides listeners with a selection
of tunes defying description while still striking familiar chords. It’s
invigorating work reassuring those with flagging faith in modern music that
there are artists and bands still moving and pushing the boundaries of what the
art form can provide us in the modern world. It’s needed more desperately than
ever before.
The
quasi-metal stomp of “Love Kills Slowly” opens the album with a hammer blow and
it’s further enhanced by snatches of coherent, melodic lead guitar. Lead
vocalist and lyricist Daniel Fiskum has an unusual voice, not a typical hard
rock belter by far, but second vocalist Jessica Rasche functions as a more than
effective counterpoint for his idiosyncratic approach. The fatalistic tone of
the song is well in keeping with the album’s intense, very adult themes. The
second track “Strange Attractor” opens with a keyboard blast courtesy of Fiskum
before moving into a more dynamically diverse offering than we heard with the
opener. Rasche doesn’t have the same presence in this song as she did with the
opener, but makes her talent felt on the track nonetheless. Guitarist Simon
Husbands offers the same gripping guitar work we heard with the opener, but it
never risks cliché.
An
acoustic flourish opens “Life in White” and they couple it with a dash of the
epic well in keeping with their devotion to cinematic overtones. The lyrical
side of the song features some incisive writing from Fiskum without ever
risking any of the aforementioned clichés so often dooming lesser talents.
Drummer Chad Helmonds is a standout on the track “House of No More Dreams” and
teams with Husbands to make a powerful musical statement between the two men.
There’s
a musically lighter touch on the track “Hole in the Day”, near balladic, and
the different vocal feel is an exciting change from the earlier tunes without
ever sounding out of place. Like Blood
for Music’s second to last tune “My Eyes Were Closed” opens with its chorus
and has a near orchestral vibe imbuing it with a big screen feel never
betraying their clearly muscular bearing. The finale “Legendary” mixes
keyboards and the band’s traditional rock leanings in a charged closer with
Fiskum’s voice leading the way in a heartfelt way. There is no question blood
carries a lot of this band’s music because there’s commitment behind every
tune. Anyone who loves committed music will respond to this album.
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