
The bonus of having an album-defining track up top has long
been championed here and ‘Get Away’
does the job for this, the second album from core four-piece combo Belle Adair.
Plenty of harmonious ‘oohs and ahs’ blend into the twangy jangly guitars then
emerge to be omnipresent throughout the eleven tracks that form this
forty-minute album. While this sound is not what you would expect from, both the
area and FAME recording studio where this album saw the light of day, there is
certainly a classic American tinge to it, if not necessary pure Americana.
Although, association with late 60s California is likely to be referred to, us
Brits have perfected the sound, noticeably in the 90s Brit-Pop explosion and
more recently in indie bands such as Co-Pilgrim and The Dreaming Spires. Any
fans of these three strands of music are likely to find the contents of
TUSCUMBIA agreeable.
The band led by Matthew Green are as mentioned a core
four-piece outfit featuring drums and multiple guitars, but studio keys also play a
big part as exemplified by the presence of label co-owner Ben Tanner (Alabama
Shakes) as a touring member. The album is a seamless body of work, conventional to grasp and not full
of hidden crevices. ‘Out on the Blue’
adopts a minor mid-album tempo switch before ‘Pushing the Stone’ scales the peak of the latter stages. This last
track succeeds in replicating the stunning melodies, which greet you in the
opener and its sequential follower ‘Long
Fade Out’.
Repetition is a key to whether you grasp this album or not,
and in a rare occurrence for much of the reviewed material here, diversity does
not have a major role to play. The vocals reside somewhere in cumulus nimbus territory
and allow plenty of room for the multitude of gently strummed guitar riffs to
flourish. One certainty is that once you fall under its spell, this record will
be very hard to shake off; surely not a too shabby trait to have.
The Muscle Shoals area has a rich history of bearing the fruit of music from humble backwater surroundings and projecting it around the world. Whether TUSCUMBIA does the same for Belle Adair remains to be seen, but markets do spring up for this type of music and plenty across the pond will be wooed. Conclusively, this album evolves as a swimmingly good record to kick back to and enjoy whatever the season. Mildly revivalist, yet forever appealing.