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How much can one fan of OKOM (Our Kind Of Music) accomplish in just a couple of years? Plenty, if it's Rockzilla, aka photographer Michael Johnson. From 2003 to 2005, rockzilla.net was a chronicle of the alt.country scene from a uniquely Texan perspective. But all good things must end, and Rockzilla has retired from the online 'zine scene.

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 Shining a light upon music that matters

 

Brian Keane
I Ain't Even Lonely
Mix-O-Rama Records
By Danté Dominick

There is not one hint --- not even the tiniest --- that this is the debut recording of a twentysomething "newcomer." This is polished work, and not the slick, over-produced, computerized pop sorta polish. This is polished as in shining at the peak of possible luster.

It might be of use to preface the following review with the fact that it takes an awful lot for a singer/songwriter to grab my attention. I can strum all the chords, pick all the fills and make passable rhymes to the tried and true topics myself, and so can four billion other folks with a guitar. Therefore I am astounded when a record such as this floors me with its remarkable achievements.

The music is well-rounded, versatile and handled with great care. The songwriting is a testament that good songwriting truly is an art, a difficult one at that. Keane is a heartfelt, knowing and playful wordsmith. His vocals aren't distinguishable by anything astonishing; his voice isn't nasally, raspy, especially robust....it's just right on. Keane never over-extends himself; he reaches deep when he's got it in him and rides it smooth when that's what's right.

I'm guessing some of this record's shine is owed to producer (and drummer) Eldridge Goins. Keane is new blood in Austin, but those familiar with the area's scene notice some lofty locals pitching in on the record (Carolyn Wonderland, Guy Forsyth, Papa Mali, Stephen Doster, Patrice Pike just to get started). And again....for a guy's first time fronting in the studio, I Ain't Even Lonely plays impossibly good from beginning to end.

The title cut leads the record and quickly establishes that this guy can write an earnest song. Keane meets, basically, the ultimate criterion: he takes an emotion we all know and expresses it convincingly better than we can, now matter how many times we've tried in our lifetimes; enamored and poetic, but ultimately very clear.

"Go So Wrong" follows. Keane tinkles a barroom piano and Colin Brooks coaxes the dobro to take a drink. The rhythm is right on cue:

Last night them emotions got high
And baby we both said some things we didn't mean
And if I could take them all back, honey
You know I would
I wish I'd have never said those awful things

If the country-blues rhythm section didn't give it away, these lyrics did: we know where this familiar tale is going, right? Wrong:

Things like I want you, I need you
I got to, got to have you
I can't go through life alone
I like you, I love you
I think the world of you
Baby, how'd I go so wrong?

Keane's twist is not only fun because the "awful things" he said are not what we expected, but also because they are oh so true. There's nothing that keeps a flame's interest hotter than a little curiosity and mystery. Remove that and, at least in this case, the fire's out and a good thing's gone.

This isn't the only time Keane plays on our expectations. He seems to get a kick out of setting up seemingly obvious rhymes, but don't jump ahead of him to the apparent finishing couplet. Because if there's a parallel to life in Keane's writing, it is to expect the unexpected. In other words, he might not finish the rhyme.

"It's Been a Long Day" is certainly a highlight. Keane uses a handful of phrases from Townes van Zandt's "Flying Shoes," and gives van Zandt equal writing credit as well as a "dedicated to":

It's been a long day
And I'm wishing it was over
I've seen better days, ain't it true.

Nothing of great note happens to the singer: no terrible break-up, loss, catastrophe or calamity. Most days, after all, come and go without cataclysmic events in our personal lives. But we've all experienced prolonged sighs at the close of a day that simply put, didn't fulfill us. The only cure seems to be a whole new day to start afresh and it can't come soon enough. "It's Been a Long Day" is that sigh in beautiful song and verse.

>Among my personal favorites is "Piece of Me." Admit it, we've all been extremely ticked at some screwy piece of small cellophane packaging that we can't get open no matter how easy it should be and how hard we try, finally attacking it like a wild dog on a wounded bunny. Keane turns this scenario into love:

Now we live in Texas
Where the winter lasts from five to seven days
So we rush to use the fireplace
Before the sun comes up to heat the morning haze
She finds the matches
But the wrapping won't come free
She says, "baby, open this for me"
Take me teeth baby,
It's just another piece of me

This highlight reel could continue for quite some time. To read about all the things I like on the record would take longer than it would to listen and decide for yourself (47 minutes). Being a debut on a local indie label, originally only one pressing was ordered, but that sold out just about instantly. Word-of-mouth travels fast when there's something worth talking about. So Keane and company finished a second pressing and hope to find similar results. Do yourself a favor and give Brian Keane a listen to; you're bound to come up with your own favorite moments.

www.keanetunes.com

Contact Dante Dominick at  dominick-at-rockzilla.net

 

 
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