Album Reviews

The Mastersons: Transient Lullaby

The Mastersons
Transient Lullaby
(Red House)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

The husband and wife singing-songwriting couple has been on the road nearly non-stop since their previous release, both on their own and as band members (and opening act) for Steve Earle. While that incessant traveling, alluded to in this albumโ€™s title, makes for rich sources for lyrical content, it can also place a strain on a marriage. That theme also influences this, their third release.ย 

The result is an altogether hazier alt-country/folk-inflected approach, partially suggested by the murky cover photo of the twosome in a not particularly romantic pose seemingly just after dusk. Songs such as the slow country lament with ominous strings and vibraphone โ€œThis Isnโ€™t How It Was Supposed to Goโ€ (โ€œInstead of basking in the afterglow/ love is wilting in the shadowsโ€) and the more upbeat โ€œFightโ€ (โ€œI can see it in your face/ Youโ€™re looking at me like a scarecrowโ€ finally admitting โ€œI donโ€™t want to fight with anyone else but youโ€) tell the story. Things arenโ€™t any better on the mid-tempo, self-explanatory โ€œDonโ€™t Tell Me to Smileโ€ (โ€œKeeping you at armโ€™s length/ Keeps a piece of me safe inside/ I canโ€™t fake itโ€) or the stripped down with forlorn harmonica of โ€œHappy When Iโ€™m Movinโ€™โ€ (โ€œThe time has come for us to part waysโ€) to the extent that you hope the couple arenโ€™t reflecting on their own relationship. If so, it may not survive past this album. In that light, the duet aspect of these songs makes them resonate even more powerfully.

Musically, the set isnโ€™t quite as dark as its subject matter with the twosomeโ€™s winsome harmony leads and Eleanor Whitmoreโ€™s melancholy, often overdubbed strings (violin, viola, cello, mandolin etc.) supported by bass, drums and keyboards that stay on low boil, allowing the singers and lyrics the spotlight. Tracks such as โ€œYou Could Be Wrongโ€ โ€“ whose lyrics are either personal or politically angled — allow room for Chris Mastersonโ€™s lead guitar to stretch out with a subtle and resonate solo as the track winds to its end. Eleanorโ€™s rich and moving voice, somewhat similar to that of Sheryl Crow, is the better of the two and even though the couple shares vocals, itโ€™s her singing that rings most strongly throughout.

The closing โ€œAnchorโ€ with the hopeful โ€œWeโ€™ll be as good as gold, yeah weโ€™re gonna shineโ€ provides a glimmer of hope that the Mastersons will weather whatever personal storms they have experienced to continue moving into a career that with Transient Lullaby seems to be gaining traction.