Album Reviews

Joshua James: My Spirit Sister

Joshua James
My Spirit Sister
(MTN)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

No one will ever accuse singer/songwriter Joshua James of being shallow. On the contrary, over the course of four previous albums and a handful of EPs stretching back to 2004, the Utah-by-way-of-Nebraska troubadour has been digging into his own — and others’ — psyches, aiming to explore the inner workings of the usual singer/songwriter topics of love, religion, humanity and, as implied by this albumโ€™s title, spiritual concepts.

While those themes might seem already pretty well played out, Jamesโ€™ whispered voice, incisive lyrics and songs that balance his introspective tendencies with sweet, taut melodies make this a compelling listen. Reverbed, often floating guitars collide with sing-along choruses that creep up on you, sneaking into your head and swirling around. Thatโ€™s especially the case on โ€œReal Love,โ€ a misleading title since the protagonist sings, โ€œโ€ฆis there any hope for real love?โ€ before repeating, โ€œtell everybody in my head,โ€ on a song that switches tempos almost halfway through, perhaps indicating the mental instability of the singer.

James might be recounting the story of his early years (or someone elseโ€™s) on the ominous โ€œDark Cloud,โ€ where a love once on fire fizzles out over a 10-year period (โ€œI woke up nine years later to a woman I donโ€™t even seeโ€), leaving him wondering if he has the titular haze over his head. Things donโ€™t improve romantically on the bleak โ€œPretty Featherโ€ either. Here James muses over his lover seeing another man with โ€œIโ€™m living with the ghost of a woman who doesnโ€™t feel the same.โ€ Heโ€™s also torn about having a child, as he sings on โ€œMillieโ€ that, โ€œIโ€™ve got a baby cominโ€™ April, God I donโ€™t know what I should do/ I guess I could let her Mom raise her, put her on a retainer/ leave her singinโ€™ the no daddy blues.โ€ Life doesnโ€™t get much bleaker than that.

The accompanying music, played by a backing three-piece (James isnโ€™t credited with any instruments), is meticulously recorded with understated, effective overdubs that provide a full, colorful palette of sound, enriching even the most melancholy of tunes with a lighter touch. There may be substantial gloom in Jamesโ€™ world but he balances that with a ray of sunlight in the construction of his bittersweet ballads.

One look at the cover photo of James hiding behind a skeleton mask is enough to understand that things are not rosy in his world. Regardless, he turns those lemons into the lemonade of a moving work that never feels quite as gloomy as it is.