Album Reviews

Anders Osborne: Spacedust and Ocean Views

 

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Anders Osborne
Spacedust & Ocean Views
(Back On Dumaine)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

Anyone who has experienced Anders Osborne in concert knows he can burn it up with guitar shred fireworks like Neil Young and Crazy Horse on an inspired night. Not surprisingly the trilogy of impressive — some may say career defining — albums he released on Alligator starting in 2010 highlighted that aspect of his talents. But Osborne has split from the label and the first indie release on his new imprint makes a clear sonic break with those discs too.

Instead of growling guitar rave-ups, Osborne sinks into a comfy, bittersweet and introspective vibe. Opening track โ€œPontchartrainโ€ with barely there heartbeat-like tom-toms, a laid back circular guitar figure and Osborne repeating โ€œI am a burning manโ€ with wistful resignation, sets the stage for the remaining 11 selections. They follow a similar formula albeit with different, often beautifully layered instrumentation that includes subtle horns, reeds, keyboards and on the exquisite ballad โ€œCape Cod,โ€ an overdubbed string quartet which makes the song arguably Osborneโ€™s most sensitive and lovely composition.

Clearly Osborne is in reflective mode, even when the pace picks up in the low boil funk of โ€œWindโ€ and the swampy crawl of โ€œMove Back to Mississippi,โ€ย  the discโ€™s toughest and most gospel inspired moment. He laments for a lover, now in heaven with a bluesy guitar break on the heartbreaking and emotional โ€œCan You Still Hear Me?โ€ made even more sensitive by strings that delicately swell at the songโ€™s end. On the self-explanatory โ€œBurning Up Slowlyโ€ we feel his angst trying to understand the flow of life set against sparse guitar, bass drum backing that along with his yearning voice is all the song needs to get its message across.

A cornucopia of top Louisiana session pros such as drummer Johnny Vidacovich, Ivan Neville and Brady Blade are credited but not with which song they contribute to. The closing spoken word with sparse, jazzy backing โ€œFrom Spaceโ€ brings in Rickie Lee Jones to add vocals on the discโ€™s most poetic, unusual and avant-garde piece that seems to be at least partially narrated by an alien.

How this will be received by Osborneโ€™s fans who may be expecting something a bit more demonstrative based on his previous output remains to be seen. But give the singer-songwriter credit for shifting direction to follow a muse that is very much in evidence on this stirring set.