I buy three new albums every month. I deviate from that number occasionally, but I stay pretty consistent with it. Figuring out which three to choose each month is a fun exercise usually occuring on the first of the month or the last day of the previous month. Recently I've started using the MP3 download section of Amazon.com to sample albums as the primary way of determining which ones make the cut. Amazon gives 30 seconds or so of each song which I've found is ideal for getting a preliminary feel for the music.
About a year ago, The Gaslight Anthem made their way onto my radar and I sampled their first album, "Sink or Swim." But it just didn't do much for me. Maybe a little too loud, a little too raucous. Several months later, though -- November, to be exact -- I was researching music for that month and decided to give "Sink or Swim" another listen. And for whatever reason, this time around it really hit me. What was the difference? I honestly don't know, but I'm content to live in that agnosis. One of the things I really love about music -- and I suppose one could say this about any artform -- is that the experience of a given piece is never exactly the same twice. The overall feel of a song is cast through the prism of our perceptions in the given moment.
Anyway, "Sink or Swim" ended up being my favorite album on my November playlist, and one of my favorites in recent history. The rawness that turned me off on first audition drew me in and ends up really giving a lot of flavor to this band's debut offering. Blue-collar and focused on a few characters introduced to the listener in each track, The Gaslight Anthem's lyrical style is clearly influenced by fellow Jersey rocker Bruce Springsteen. And for those of us of a certain age, the experience might be more than a little reminiscent of the first time you heard Bon Jovi's "Living on a Prayer." Has the Garden State cornered the market on this sound? Hmmm, maybe. Pete Yorn's aural flavor is not far off either. There you go -- four New Jersey acts with distinct styles but with some commonalities tying them all together. Someone start a Facebook group!
Every track on "Sink or Swim" is a hit -- and there's a very short list of albums I'd say that about -- but here are a few that really stand out:
- The Navesink Banks: I guess this one stands out mostly because it's a straightforward, mostly acoustic ballad on an album that otherwise has so many features of punk, arena rock and alternative. I won't pretend I know for certain what this song is about, but there's a fairly obvious riff on lingering guilt and regret that resonates with the darker side of our memories.
- We Came to Dance: OK, to be honest, the lyrics in this song are a little cheesy. It's about a group of guys who arrive at a dance hall and, well, their declaration of purpose is right there in the title. But the cheese somehow doesn't bother me. And I really love the line, "If I'm not your kind, then don't tell a soul/I'm not the one who hates being alone, so come on." Maybe because I've met women who've made me think like that.
- Red in the Morning: There's so much energy in this song. The band does a great job of building the tension in each verse and just when it seems like it's just going to explode into a cacophonous mess of lachrymose screaming, somehow they manage to rein it in and keep it focused.
5 stars: Excellent; a must-have for any music lover
4 stars: A great addition to your collection
3 stars: An effort that brings adequate quality, though not necessarily consistently
2 stars: A few good songs/pieces, but not a good album overall
1 star: Don't bother; at best, buy the singles of a song or two



