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Nothing Gold Can Stay

The Felice Brothers have been building a legion of fanatical fans with their enthusiastic stage show and rough-hewn songs that combine roots rock with poetic lyrics. Last year, the drumming Felice brother Simone left the band to get married and reconsider his place in the musical universe. When he and his wife lost the child they were expecting, Felice holed up in a cabin with his friend drummer/songwriter Robert 'Chicken' Burke and created the burnished pop that graces the grooves of Nothing Gold Can Stay. The album's ten songs are mostly taken at a somnambulant tempo, marked by gorgeous harmonies and subtle instrumentation. But unlike your average folk/pop singer/songwriter of the early 21st century, the Duke & the King don't proffer bland reassuring clichés. The lyrics, mostly by Simone, a noted novelist and short story writer, are sharply etched and full of witty wordplay. 'Lose My Self' is a good example. An electric piano hangs shimmering chords in the air while a radio in the background drifts between stations filling the air with static and garbled words. Felice sings the simple lyric, 'It makes me want to lose myself' over and over while random voices drift in and out of the mix wailing, testifying, and lamenting. It's a puzzling song, but full of emotion and ambiguity. The rest of the songs are more traditional in form, but just as compelling. 'If You Ever Get Famous' explores the hazards of celebrity, but it's not a sour grapes portrait of show biz life, or a jealous lament. Felice just lays out the facts, letting the shimmering sadness of the music -- mostly vibraphone and drums -- carry the emotional weight. 'Water Spider' is another achingly beautiful melody with the duo's celestial harmonies delivering an impressionistic lyric that combines profound and mundane images of nature, religion, and politics for an unsettling effect. 'Still Remember Love' is a lilting love song that suggests the Beach Boys without being an obvious knockoff, 'Summer Morning Rain' is a poetic, folky, protest song that could have been written by Fred Neil. The whispered tragedy of 'One More American Song' addresses war, love, religion, economic collapse, and the spirit of music and friendship that can make the trials of life worth living through. It's a quiet anthem for our times that's as moving and timely as anything that came out of the '60s. The singing may be subdued and the playing quiet, but everything here packs an emotional wallop.

  • Format:CD CATALOGUE#:CTX507CD
  • $ 24.99

Additional Product Details

  • ArtistDUKE & THE KING,THE
  • BrandINTER
  • Number of Discs 1
  • ClassificationE
  • Audio Type 1.0
  • Release Date Aug 7, 2009

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