Drive-By Truckers -- Brighter Than Creation's Dark


10/10

As I look back on some of my previous "Best of the Year" lists, there are many things I would change. Labeling Drive-By Truckers' Brighter Than Creation's Dark as 2008's best album is not one of them. 2008 was an epic time for me, one of those year's where everything just seemed a little bigger and more important.  Brighter Than Creation's Dark was released January of 2008, and there wasn't a month of peaks and valleys that passed that it didn't get multiple spins from me (and seeing their incredible set at the end of that September was icing on the cake).
Brighter Than Creation's Dark contains a perfect mix of hard-rocking songs with more thoughtful, stripped down tracks. Every song is its own world, but each fits together effortlessly in a perfect, four-side scheme. While any proud Southerner can take tightly to these tracks, anyone with emotion and good taste can easily connect to Brighter Than Creation's Dark's sentiments. Jeez, I hate trying to sell something. This album is perfect. Sometimes it's got that classic Southern rock three-guitar attack. Sometimes it has that down home country feeling...not radio country, but just that kind of sound that makes you feel like you are in it. The slide guitar pops up in most of the songs, and it is the album's heart and secret weapon. "Gritty, But Fatherly" Patterson Hood, "Aw, Shucks" Mike Cooley, and "I'm a Girl and I Kick Ass" Shonna Tucker make for the most compelling trio of songwriters on an album ever.  Listening to these tales of our tough times matched with feelings of defiance like "A Ghost to Most," loving character portraits of people like "Bob," an overweight single man taking care of his mother, and stories like that of the front-man of an "Opening Act" driving through the night and thinking is pretty much the same thing as eating the best meatloaf ever on top of fresh mashed potatoes under a big scoop of gravy and getting that lovely warm feeling like you are safe and home and the world might be far from a perfect place, but if you think you are going to take me out of it, you have another thing coming. I guess I prefer run-on's to salesmanship.
Now go listen to "A Ghost to Most," below and have nice day:


2008 New West Records
1. Two Daughters and a Beautiful Wife 3:05
2. 3 Dimes Down 3:20
3. The Righteous Path 4:13
4. I'm Sorry Huston 3:11
5. Perfect Timing 2:57
6. Daddy Needs a Drink 3:48
7. Self Destructive Zones 4:12
8. Bob 2:15
9. Home Field Advantage 5:01
10. The Opening Act 6:48
11. Lisa's Birthday 3:19
12. That Man I Shot 6:03
13. The Purgatory Line 3:48
14. The Home Front 3:18
15. Checkout Time in Vegas 2:41
16. You and Your Crystal Meth 2:19
17. Goode's Field Road 5:28
18. A Ghost to Most 4:41
19. The Monument Valley 4:33

Comments

Anonymous said…
Nic,

You are amazing in your diligence to review all of these albums. I am enjoying hearing new music and reading your thoughts on different albums. Peace be with you my friend.

davidloti=davidloti
Man, I really appreciate that. Peace be with you, as well.
buck09 said…
The opening line to "Ghost to Most" rings about as true to 80% of honest Americans as it gets. I could never grow sideburns worth a shit either. Really enjoy reading your DBT reviews as you put into words what I think in my head every time I hear this lovely band. And with as obsessive as I am with seeking out new music there is always time to throw on the Truckers and forget about everything else that I thought was important at the time. Such a great album, as is just about all of them. Looking forward to the latest album reviews coming up.
It's always been a beard for me. Sometimes I grow it anyway, my wife tells me it looks like crap, and I shave it. Glad you are enjoying these reviews, man. Anytime is DBT time!

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