For me the true magic of alt-country is where it harnesses
the momentum of post punk new wave and fans the flames with a touch of roots
instrumentation and no little amount of twang. Ronnie achieves this with an
eleven song collection of near 100% originals running the optimum length of the
playing of both sides of an old 33”. Without delay the album hits top gear from
the first track, the crashing guitar laden ‘Another
Train’, and only periodically pauses to extract some country gold, embodied
in the duet ‘Never Gonna Last’ sang
in unison with Jenna Paulette.
Ronnie shared the production duties with Sigardur Birkis and
its recording location fluctuated from Tennessee to Texas via Illinois. The
finished article is a full length record attracting the gushing compliment of
revealing intrinsic high spots upon each listen. However one constant is the
sheer magnitude of the heavy weight country rocker ‘Eighteen Wheels’. Piano fuelled in places and recorded with
respected Texas musician Rhett Miller, this road song namechecks listening to
Hank, Waylon, Willie, Dylan, Cash and Emmylou but adding this track to your in-car
playlist will not see it out of place. A growing candidate for album highlight
is the highly charged closer ‘Come on
Down’. Anthemic in sound, wrapped in segments of sublime pedal steel and resolute in message, the power of song to
reflect life is packaged neatly into this spirited finale.
With the digitalisation of music breaking down borders,
there is no reason why Ronnie’s appreciation in UK and Europe cannot grow
tenfold. Whether or not practicalities are in place for overseas travel, the
vision of Ronnie playing live endlessly threads through listening to this CD
and many of the tracks especially some of the upbeat ones such as ‘The Natural End’, ‘A Place Out in the
Country’ and ‘Old Life’, are
built for the stage. Of the remaining tracks, the snappy beat and an injection
of twang flavours the melodic ‘The Big
Catch’, while acoustic vibes feature heavily on the only non-original
number ‘Song for Zulu’. A similar low
fi feel attaches itself to ‘I Can’t Make
You Happy’ and the apologetically titled ‘I’m Sorry Baby (That’s Just It Way Goes)’ probably goes as close as
any song to ultimately defining the true sound of Ronnie Fauss.
At a time of the year when the whole online music community
goes into overdrive with reflective lists, spare a little time to listen to
some late calendar releases which can get a little lost. However BUILT TO BREAK
by Ronnie Fauss is built to last and has the legs to continue to gain momentum well
into 2015 and beyond. Hopefully increased availability and greater awareness of
this fine record will help raise Ronnie’s profile in the UK.
Exclusive link to purchase the album
Exclusive link to purchase the album
www.ronniefauss.com