
Penny & Sparrow
Let Aย Lover Drown You
(Single Lock)
Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
Look no further than the title to Penny & Sparrowโs third full length to realize this is not something youโll play to lighten your emotional load. On the contrary, these 11 melodramatic ballads will likely strip any joy or optimism you might be experiencing and replace it with tears as the melancholy melodies and passion-laden vocals rip and tear at your heartstrings.
In other words, itโs business as usual for Andy Baxter and Kyle Jahnke (aka Penny & Sparrow) even if this time they receive higher profile production assistance from the Civil Warsโ John Paul White (who also gets writing credits on over half the tracks) and Alabama Shakes keyboardist Ben Tanner. So, if morose, meandering songs that feel as if the singer wonโt be able to finish the tune without breaking down and sobbing is your thing, thisโll fit the bill and then some. Compared to Penny & Sparrow, Nick Drake sounds like a party animal.
To be fair, the duo widens their acoustic-based palette with the subtle addition of vibes, glockenspiel, sitar, sporadic strings and even Tannerโs โspaceship noisesโ that close out โMakeshift.โ Arrangements that expand and contract like the tides provide a sense of motion that occasionally help propel these heavy-lidded tunes forward. And, the White/Turner production is clean, classy and appropriately dense or sparse depending on the tune. But a little of Penny & Sparrowโs deep, dark, often dreary introspection and affected vocals goes a long way. Even at a relatively brisk โ a word used loosely since nothing is exactly hurried here — 40 minutes, the album seems twice as long. Death, guilt, unrequited love, loneliness โฆ the list goes on, but for those looking for light at the end of the tunnel, there arenโt many bright moments in these yearning downer tracks.
Perhaps already depressed listeners might find some uplift in these songs and sporadically, as on the string-enhanced โOccasion,โ a memorable melody takes hold showing the pairโs songwriting talents. Taken individually, the songs resonate better. But lumped together the effect is claustrophobic and cheerless. Many might feel plowing through this album is a sure cure for insomnia and wish the twosome better fortunes in the future to reflect some of lifeโs pleasures in their music, a sentiment sorely lacking in Penny & Sparrowโs painfully moody and gloomy outlook.
