|
Home: J : Jars
Of Clay : Review
Who We Are Instead Review
For 2002's Eleventh Hour, Jars of Clay seemed
to transfer the inherent power of their music from soulful
vocals and grassroots gospel to the din of ragged electric
guitars and anxious drum machines. That wasn't a bad decision,
necessarily, but the album did seem to be more of a mood
piece than anything. For Who We Are Instead, the band settled
into the comfortable Tennessee environs of its own Sputnik
studio and set about tuning up those old acoustic guitars.
The resulting 13 songs still nod to modernism with slick
production and the occasional twinge of programming. But
where the electronics of Eleventh tracks like "Disappear" or "Revolution" seemed
to cast a shadow, the gritty, percolating bottom end of Who
We Are Instead's "Trouble Is" adds resolve to the
song's slide-guitar tale of darkness and light. "My
heart ain't built to stay," vocalist Dan Haseltine sings
in an appropriately world weary tone. "Jesus told me
so." It's in this way that Jars of Clay unites their
own beliefs with the larger church of American roots music. "Amazing
Grace" (with its fabulous guest shot from vocalist Ashley
Cleveland) is another signpost on that long U.S. route to
redemption; it finds its spiritual brethren in Live's "Lightning
Crashes" and U2's "I Still Haven't Found What I'm
Looking For." The band even reveals the reverent heart
of America's "Lonely People," transforming the
song's "Don't give up!" message into a pep talk
supported by mandolin and impressive '70s vocal harmonies.
While the CCM-pop of single "Show Me Love" and
lively "I'm in the Way" is pleasant enough, it
doesn't resonate as effectively in the midst of Who We Are's
more honest moments. These arrive again with "Jesus'
Blood Never Failed Me Yet" -- influenced by the grace
of the homeless, nameless street singer at the center of
Gavin Bryars' epic piece -- which expertly mixes naked, almost
whispered vocals with slowly surging instrumentation, and
closer "My Heavenly," where a simple, yet determinedly
effective, paean to God weaves quietly through the strains
of a chamber pop piano. Jars of Clay's devotion will ensure
the embrace of Who We Are Instead by alternative CCM fans.
But the band's reverence for the Americana canon aligns them
with a stable of secular artists -- Counting Crows, Train,
and Ryan Adams, to name only a few -- who till the same fertile
soil.
Review by: Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
|