The Young'uns, When Our Grandfathers Said No (Navigator, 2012) The Young'uns are just that: three 20-something men, Sean Cooney, David Eagle and Michael Hughes. In this case, young only by the calendar; they sing as if far older than their years, and their attention is turned to a musical and historical past well before their time. Though the songs are mostly originals, many seem as if dredged out of distant, if distinctly local, memory. When Our Grandfathers Said No is a quote from their self-composed "The Battle of Stockton," a ballad recalling a 1933 episode in the group's native northeastern, then heavily industrial England, when down-on-their-luck working stiffs confronted a band of brownshirts and sent them packing.
The production leans toward the spare, sometimes no more than the three voices, sometimes ornamented with accordion and guitar, occasionally a few other instruments. The voices are at the forefront, however, and never fail to move the song and the listener. The trio elevates "Wild Goose," by the late Canadian folksinger-songwriter Wade Hemsworth, to epic status in a particularly riveting performance and sophisticated arrangement. It's followed by the quieter, understated closer, "Jenny Waits for Me," as if to leave the listener with a lasting reminder of the group's range. My only complaint, a small one, is that Grandfathers features no genuinely traditional songs. That's not to say that the songs that are there are in any way unworthy. It's just that I'd like to hear what they can do with the actual sources of their remarkable music. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET music review by Jerome Clark 26 January 2013 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |