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Weighing in at 12 tracks and 44 minutes, Robby’s album is a
thoughtful introspective record rooted in the art of personal expression. Produced
by Lex Price (Mindy Smith, k.d. Lang), the former resident of Knoxville
Tennessee has re-created a sound inspired by some of the great
singer-songwriters of the past and is a comfortable fit into the wealth of
folk-Americana which is currently undergoing a transatlantic resurgence.
There is much merit in raising the awareness of different
types of mental illness and Robby doesn’t shy away from using the release to
explain how he has come to terms with bipolar. The 3rd track on the
album titled ‘Feeling It Now’ is his
own composition on the subject and is a brave attempt to develop a coping
strategy. Elsewhere the album has a couple of moments where the accelerator pedal
is slightly more de-compressed including the track ‘New York City’ which has had a video made to enhance the album’s
promotion. In a similar vein, ‘Papa’s
Down The Road Dead’ is one of the album’s more rhythmic numbers but
generally, tranquillity is the overriding feel from the listening experience best
exemplified by the softening ‘Barrio Moon’.
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While the album slightly undulates in its mood, the inbuilt tranquillity
is a firm fixture of the final three tracks namely: ‘Cars
and Bars’, ‘Stars’ and ‘When I’m With
You Now’. However the quality is seamless and the content is an antidote to
throwaway pop that falls straight into the arms of an Americana movement raised
on a diet of Townes Van Zandt.
When Robby teams up with fellow artists David Berkeley and
Peter Bradley Adams under the New American Troubadours banner for their summer
European dates, the stakes of song writing are certain to be raised and the bar
of anticipation is to be set high. While we wait for these live dates, enjoying
this 3rd release by Robby Hecht is the perfect aperitif.