“The End”
from the album Until the Sadness is Gone
2006
iTunes

MP3 – “The End” [right-click/save-as]

David & the Citizens’ full length LP Until the Sadness is Gone includes two of the songs that appeared on their selt-titled EP — the Beulah-infused Bruce Springsteen track “Graycoated Morning” and the California Pop of “Let’s Not Fall Apart.” The title of this album might be a little deceiving. Until the Sadness is Gone sounds a little like a collection of unreleased Elliott Smith songs. However, this is a collection of pretty upbeat pop songs. There are a few “dark” moments, but even then it still sounds as though David Fridlund, the Swedish songwriter behind David & the Citizens, is trying hard to sound a little sadder than he really is. The result is pretty darn good and the album is pretty consistent. It’s not an album that needs a lot of poking and prodding, as it’s basically just a very good pop record.

The album starts with “The End” (har har), which sounds something like a pop spaghetti western. A rolling drum beat, a western guitar line, and harmonized vocals finally erupt into something that could have been on a Devotchka album. It’s much more tame than anything that Devotchka ever did, but it somehow captures that flying trapeze artist in a rodeo effect.

The rest of the album has a few gems that sneak up behind you. Fridlund’s voice might take a listen or two to get used to as it is very Top 40 radio pop-punky, but the music lifts it out of that genre and right into this mix of the Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle, and… Ben Folds? “Never a Bottom” is a soaring ballad, “Sore Feet + Blisters” is a quiet acoustic lament, and “Silverjacketgirl” is pure rock explosion. God, that song must have been fun to record. I imagine Fridlund jumping and up and down and making love to a mic stand the way Tina Turner used to. Maybe not.

~ Jeffrey Throp, the Tripwire

 

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Founded in Madison, WI in 2005, Jonk Music is a daily source for new music.