Album Review: “Rancho Shalom”, “Lucky Nights”, “Ghost Approaches”

Reviewed By

rancho shalom

Rancho Shalom
Evan Kertman
Perpetual Doom
2022

World, meet Evan Kertman. His debut album, Rancho Shalom (Perpetual Doom), invites the listener out onto the back patio to bask in his sun-dappled California country-folk glow. Chamber pop instrumentation charms and the clean West Coast-style production shimmers.

Radio-ready tracks “Only The Birds” and “The Same Song” hint at jangle pop and psychedelia, respectively, but the collection as a whole stays firmly rooted in Americana roots music. The overall vibe is mellow — think Leonard Cohen in Nashville or Bob Dylan in Muscle Shoals.

Kertman’s lazy baritone is front and center in each mix, his lyrics boasting a sly self-assuredness usually reserved for singer-songwriters longer in the tooth. Kertman’s work on this album provides a fine breezy summertime listen. A most impressive debut.

lucky nights

Lucky Nights
Mila Webb
Perpetual Doom
2022

Lucky you, listener, beholding for the first time Mila Webb’s debut EP Lucky Nights (Perpetual Doom). Even having a genetic leg-up on other musical artists (what with being the daughter of songwriting legend Jimmy Webb and all), Mila has obviously made the most of honest hard work, crafting her songs in relative Zen-like anonymity.

A light-handed rhythm section, gentle acoustic strums,and tasteful electric guitar chimes and slides all get stirred into a gorgeous dream pop/indie folk stew. And the sparse haunted poetry of the lyrics befit her double-tracked ethereal voice. The four songs here breeze past in the time it takes to watch a winter sunset fade, most definitely leaving the listener wanting more — always a good thing!

Luck and chance may play their roles, but gritty persistence and a monk-like devotion to art get one further along in the end. What a mesmerizing and delightful small-scale wonder Lucky Nights is, promising more good things to come.

ghost approaches

Ghost Approaches
Earl Vallie
Perpetual Doom
2022

California desert-baked off-kilter troubadour Earl Vallie raises the dead on his new album Ghost Approaches (Perpetual Doom). With rough around the edges production from Greg Saunier (Deerhoof), the album veers back and forth between balls-out classic rockers (Boss-esque/psych-stoner opener “Ready to Die,” fist-pumping anthem “Tarantulan Son”) and more nuanced goth-tinged Americana pop numbers (“Prom,” “Autumn Leaves”).

Vallie’s vocals steal the show with rockabilly crooning yodeling yips and harrowing laser-lit stadium screams. On the brooding “My Baby’s Broom,” he somehow evokes Nice Cave contacting Roy Orbison on an Ouija board. This man is truly filled with the high-and-holy rock-and-roll spirit, and Ghost Approaches is possessed with it in the best way possible.

Author

  • Harold Whit Williams is guitarist for the critically acclaimed rock band Cotton Mather, and he releases lo-fi home recordings as Daily Worker. He is a 2018 Pushcart Prize Nominee, and also recipient of the 2014 Mississippi Review Poetry Prize. His collection Backmasking was winner of the 2013 Robert Phillips Poetry Chapbook Prize from Texas Review Press, and his latest, My Heavens, is available from FutureCycle Press. He lives in Austin, Texas.

    Williams

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