Yoni Gordon and The Goods‘ latest album ‘Turning Chaos Into A Career‘ has had me returning for repeated listens above and beyond the call of duty. The passionate frontman and his gang showcase a comprehensive set of songs and an album that doesn’t lag at any stage.
The band are frequently accosted to ‘Ted Leo & The Pharmacists‘ and I can see where this comparison comes from but with this release they may break out of this shadow. It is more likely that aspiring to recreate the sentiments of his heroes, namely Bruce Springsteen and Elvis Costello, has seen Yoni expand his horizons. This is immediately noticeable with upbeat opener ‘Dead But Not Forgotten‘ with its ambitious structure and inclusion of organs and bells as well as a full on campfire worthy clap and chant ending.
Yoni‘s nasal voice, slightly reminiscent of Ben Weasel from Screeching Weasel, is certainly an acquired taste but serves as a reminder that the band’s roots were planted in the punk movement. However, the introduction of folk and dub elements give these tracks an inventive spark and moves them beyond their original scope.
The title track as well as ‘His Nation in Decline‘ and ‘Test Of Time‘ take on this mantra introducing syncopated verses and memorable guitar riffs that are as good as anything Bedouin Soundclash, The Dead 60’s and other Clash disciples have released in recent years. Besides, even when the band return to a tried and tested “punk and roll” formula on a couple of moments it is done with enough enthusiasm and lyrical wit to keep it from sounding generic.
‘Polish Hill‘ is a slow building mix of violins, accordions, big bass drums and lightly strummed guitars that grows into a wonderful folk crescendo. The track was a brave inclusion on the album and is the bands most challenging moment. It is a sweeping tribute (I presume) to Polish Hill in his native New York and comes close to recreating Springsteen‘s idealist observation of every day people and forays into Americana. This was a risky inclusion as it could have looked out of place next to the rest of the tracks but ultimately the common lyrical theme links it with the rest of the album seamlessly.
Tracks like ‘Army Time Is Over‘ and ‘Election Year (2008)‘ inject a dose of politics next to the ever present social consciousness theme. These topics are clearly important to Yoni and he is ably expresses his views clearly without shoving them down the listeners throat leaving the lasting impression of a passionate young man who wears his heart on his sleeves.
When I first listened to Yoni Gordon & The Goods I didn’t imagine it would make such a lasting impression on me. Gradually after repeated listens the album has grown on me and could merit a surprise inclusion on my Best Of 2009 list. ‘Turning Chaos Into A Career‘ is a rough diamond in amongst 2009 more prominent releases.
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