... Album of the month ...
In the world of alt-country there are those artists who stick to 
traditional storytelling, instrumentation and playing, mixing that 
hybrid of country, rock and folk, often with stunning results from tried
 and tested ingredients. Others, like The Felice Brothers,
 are prepared to test out new musical waters, evolve and expand their 
sound. From their early days as very much an authentic sounding Catskill
 Mountains band they’ve constantly pushed and prodded the genre, trying 
to find ways to breath new life into old sounds.
Their last official album, 2011’s Celebration, Florida, was 
their biggest deviation from the country/folk template and it seems that
 it reinvigorated the band, lightened their mood and encouraged them to 
chase their muse and…deliver Favorite Waitress, one of their finest all-round efforts.
The strength of the album also lays in the balance that songs like 
‘Saturday Night’, the folky funeral march of ‘Constituents’ and the 
haunting undertones of ‘Chinatown’. The latter with its twists and turns
 making it a rural American cousin of sorts to something CocoRosie might
 write. These show the range the band are capable of both in their 
songwriting and the their compositional creativity. They can do sad and 
forlorn as convincingly as they do euphoric hoedown. Through it all the 
constant is Ian Felice’s older-than-his-years dusty croak of a voice. 
Dylan-esque to a degree it is the icing on the cake of a band that has 
barely put a foot wrong across nearly a decade of great contemporary 
Americana releases. 
Jun 17, 2014
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