The Avett Brothers - True Sadness

The Guardian 40

(American/Island/Republic)

The Avett Brothers’ ninth album arrives with an open letter by Seth Avett, in which many words are written but very little is said: True Sadness, he explains, is a patchwork quilt, both thematically and stylistically, wherein “the roughest denim and the smoothest velveteen” entwine. Given their 16-year climb to success, their digression into more unusual textures feels like a bid to break out of the tweed and into something a little more mainstream. This is certainly their most varied release yet: beyond the traditional country, bluegrass and folk, the North Carolina act expand their sonic palette. May It Last is their Pink Floyd moment, while Satan Pulls the Strings reveals their wild side with a crisp, metallic sound. They also shift temperament: the yodelling on Divorce Separation Blues deliberately skewers a serious subject matter with a knowingly frivolous melody. But for all the talk of creative epiphany, their music remains the country-tinged comfort blanket it always was.

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Thu Jun 23 20:00:05 GMT 2016

Pitchfork 38

The Avett Brothers once seemed to hold an infinite amount of promise. They were a hardworking group of young men who traded in songs that were as poignant as they were ragged. The titular Avetts, the older Scott and younger Seth, wore their bleeding hearts on their sleeves, and they always came off as earnest, honest, regular fellas from North Carolina who were thoughtfully dedicated to their craft.

The band’s tide started to turn toward the big time in 2007 with the sparkling Emotionalism, and the subsequent I and Love and You found the band working with the famed Rick Rubin as their producer. But the band’s work with Rubin has yielded records scrubbed of the rawness and grit that made the band so compelling in its early years. It’s fitting, then, that The Avett Brothers’ most abysmal and disappointing record yet bears the title of True Sadness.

True Sadness is a record that can’t seem to get out of its own way. Almost every track is bloated with instrumentation. Several songs are smothered with baffling layers of synthesizers in what feels like a ploy to push the Avetts into clear Top 40 territory. They were never a bluegrass band, of course, and always existed in the interesting overlapping gray areas between folk, Americana, and rock circles. But the synths and electronic beats that burble up on “You Are Mine” and “Satan Pulls the Strings” don’t make sense for the band in any context. The shift isn’t even bold enough to warrant a “Dylan goes electric” comparison. Instead, it sounds like a half-baked bad idea that no one had the guts or sense to veto. The slathered-on saccharine arrangements sink to their most unfortunate low on closing track “May It Last,” which aims for elegance and intensity but instead comes through as a ham-fisted and embarrassing attempt at something serious.

Somewhere along the way, the Avetts lost a grip on their lyrical skills, too. True Sadness presents some astonishingly bad turns of phrase, as when Seth Avett sings about wishing to be “a tune you sang in your kitchen,” so that he “could float around your tongue and ease the tension.” Elsewhere, songs manage to be preachy and completely self-unaware, as the Avetts sing about being tempted by Satan, struggling with belief, and being victimized by the grand scheme of life itself. Losing love was once an occasion for collapsin’ and screamin’ at the moon, but the Avetts got all of that drama out of their system in 2008, it seems. Now, they offer the likes of the self-explanatory “Divorce Separation Blues,” which feels like a dopey “Oops, my bad” at best—goofy yodels don’t much help the song’s case for sympathy, either. Scott and Seth Avett sing about guilt and feeling bad, but these songs ring hollow. It’s as if the Avetts knew folks might expect heartfelt confessional material—especially in the wake of Seth’s slightly scandalous split from his wife—and wrote a clutch of songs that half-assedly check the box.

The band does find itself making one short breakthrough with “Fisher Road to Hollywood,” an intimate track that feels like being snapped from a bad dream. The song, buried on the back half of the record, is almost a sincere mea culpa, an admission of regret for the way that things went seriously wrong for the band as a unit and as individuals. The band returns to its early strong suit: Gentle acoustic strums, mournful cello, plaintive vocals. There’s the sense that all hope isn’t lost for the Avett Brothers, that maybe they could scrap all of the messy baggage they’ve acquired in their rise from grimy clubs to sold-out arenas and major label dealings. But then, those four-and-a-half minutes are over, and you’re forced to reckon with the empty misery of True Sadness once again.

Mon Jun 27 05:00:00 GMT 2016