On his second Team Love outing,
David Dondero's affiliation with
Conor Oberst comes across more clearly -- the
Bright Eyes brand of cool seeps straight through the music and into the quavering vocals. But big differences separate these two top-tier songwriters, and part of the fun of paying close attention to the tongue-in-cheek-titled
Simple Love is figuring out how far apart they really are.
Dondero, for one thing, has always been a wayfaring storyteller; here, true to form, he weaves narratives out of threads from American vistas that stifle him (Oakland, CA, in "Stuck on the Moon") or inspire him (the Mississippi River in "Mighty Mississip!"). But that's an easy distinction to make. Where
Dondero and
Oberst are most alike is in their capacity for evoking a sense of well-founded unease, despair, and heavy-heartedness. Songs like "Rothko Chapel" and "When the Heart Breaks Deep" are streaked by them; they're as fogged by disillusion as sadness, and the same mood runs through some of the songs on
Oberst's
Cassadaga, also released in 2007. What makes these songs unmistakably
Dondero's, though, is their gravity. When
Dondero sings, hope has less wiggle room, uncertainty has less air to float in. Because of it,
Simple Love sounds rooted in something deep. Older, world-wearier fans of
Bright Eyes will love it, and so will
Dondero devotees. ~ Tammy La Gorce