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Tuesday, January 15, 2019

RedRay Frazier

Blossom

Ezra Holbrook and Erin Wallace

7 p.m.

$8 in advance, $10 day of show

21 and over

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RedRay Frazier

Late night chill out music

RedRay Frazier

RedRay (Ray) Frazier has the calming presence of a prophet and the voice of a man with a grand plan--equal parts Maxwell, Nina Simone, Shuggie Otis and Radiohead... Frazier crafts a body of singer-songwriter material that would make Marvin Gaye feel like a proud spiritual godpappy.

website:
http://www.redrayfrazier.com/

Ezra Holbrook and Erin Wallace

Ezra Holbrook and Erin Wallace

Perhaps best known for his work as a founding member of the Decemberists, Ezra Holbrook is a man of prodigious talent. His most recent solo album is one of those rare works that covers love, loss and life in a low-key way, without succumbing to the often maudlin world of singer-songwriters.

From Greg Barbrick, seattlepi.com:

I was shocked at how deeply this record touched me. Ezra Holbrook is a singer/songwriter from Portland, Oregon. Now if that is not enough for you to feel pity for him...(just kidding). Actually, I think if the industry cared anymore at all about "scenes," Portland has quite a bit going on. In any case, Holbrook's Save Yourself is a deeply personal album and one that gets even more striking upon successive listens.

The title cut opens the disc, and it is a nice piece. But it was track three, with the oh-so-clever title "Collide-Oscope," that really caught my attention. I put the CD on as background while I was doing some household chores, and suddenly just had to stop and make sure of what I was hearing. This song sounds like a lost track from the Flaming Lips' masterpiece The Soft Bulletin (1999).

Now he had my attention, and the very next tune held me. "Heart Off Of Your Sleeve" sounds like one of those perfect country-tinged acoustic songs Neil Young is so famous for. What is so great about this type of music is that it comes across as seemingly effortless, yet you know the artist struggled down to his soul to get it right. In this case, the background vocals are what make it.

Ezra may be a little too clever for his own good, however. "Architect/Archetype" is just a silly title. But the song itself is fantastic. Using the familiar acoustic/country-tinged format, Holbrook lays out his case. It is a gorgeous arrangement. What really struck me was his invocation of the ghost of Ayn Rand and, in particular, Neil Peart's favorite book, Atlas Shrugged. You tell me if there is any other interpretation of a line like "Architects suffer the weight of the world." It is spellbinding though.

From there we come to the reason I wrote this review. The finest song on the album by far is "Do People Bloom." I was brought directly back to one of my all time Desert Island Discs: Pink Moon by Nick Drake. It may not be as doomed as that record is, and the sax adds some hope --but the vibe is there. I have never seen this guy live, but I imagine the women swoon to this song. And I could understand why.

Finally we come to "The Wrong, Wrong Eyes." Again I am reminded of Drake, with a little of the softer side of the Lips thrown in. Very, very nice. Save Yourself is one of those regional records that makes you wonder if the artist could "make it" nationally. Who knows, but I have to say that it is damned tasty, in all the right ways. Worthy of a listen for sure.

More reviews here and here.

website:
http://www.johnbunzow.com/

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