Thursday 23 May
 
 

Iron Aidan

Aidan Carroll Quartet
7 p.m. Wednesday, May 29
University of Central Oklahoma Jazz Lab
100 E. Fifth, Edmond
ucojazzlab.com
359-7989
$5-$7
05/22/2013 | Comments 0

Beat street

Lucky Date with Kids at the Bar and Crystal Vision
9 p.m. Wednesday, May 29
Kamps 1310 Lounge
1310 N.W. 25th
kamps1310lounge.com
819-6004
$20
05/22/2013 | Comments 0

Sun rises

Sunny Side Up with The Last Slice and Classy San Diego
8 p.m. Saturday
The Conservatory
8911 N. Western
conservatoryokc.com
607-4805
$8
05/22/2013 | Comments 0

God bless metal

Becoming the Archetype with Bermuda, The Burial, Horror Cosmic and Veil of Suffering
6 p.m. Saturday
The Conservatory
8911 N. Western
conservatoryokc.com
607-4805
$12-$14
05/15/2013 | Comments 0

Here for the party

Gretchen Wilson with Outlaw Son
6 p.m. Thursday
Newcastle Casino
2457 U.S. 62, Newcastle
mynewcastlecasino.com
387-6013
free
05/15/2013 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · CDs · Country · Turnpike Troubadours — Goodbye...
Country

Turnpike Troubadours — Goodbye Normal Street


Phil Bacharach May 23rd, 2012  

On Goodbye Normal Street, their third full-length album, Turnpike Troubadours serve up a potent brew of country, bluegrass, folk and even Creole (just to kick it up a notch). The quintet from Stillwater produces music that’s straightforward and simple, but hardly simplistic.

The 11 tracks traverse complex and emotionally rich terrain — Robert Earl Keen would approve — and so vividly that you can almost smell, as the first song coins it, “cheap perfume and gin and smoke and lies.”

A definite honky-tonk sensibility is at work here, from Kyle Nix’s raggedly effective fiddle work to Evan Felker’s sawdust-coated vocals. Standout tracks includes “Before the Devil Knows We’re Dead,” a moonshine-fueled yarn about an ill-fated May-December hillbilly romance, while “Good Lord Lorrie” and “Empty as a Drum” are lovely vignettes of weariness and regret.

The production echoes the Troubadours’ no-frills aesthetic, and while the sound occasional veers toward the homogenous, the caliber of musicianship and songwriting is enough to pull things through.

There isn’t a bad song in the bunch. “Everything is easy up until it’s complicated,” Felker sings in “Call a Spade a Spade,” a country duet that teams him with Jamie Wilson of The Trishas. The line is a fitting wrap-up of Turnpike Troubadours’ smart, introspective lyrics. Watch for big things. —Phil Bacharach

 
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