Idaho-bred singer/songwriter
Josh Ritter's V2 Records debut follows in the footsteps of 2003's
Hello Starling only in instrumentation. While he retains his literate tongue and expressive voice, there is far less humor on
Animal Years than on his previous two outings. Producer
Brian Deck (
Iron & Wine,
Modest Mouse) keeps
Animal Years intimate but transient, like a circus train crawling through a small town on a busy Saturday afternoon. Essentially built around two startlingly affecting diatribes on the war in Iraq,
Ritter utilizes the voices of Peter and Paul, as well as
Laurel & Hardy, to eke some kind of explanation from both the Administration and the Creator. The first, the deceptively sweet-sounding "Girl in the War," threatens "The angels fly around in there, but we can't see them/I got a girl in the war, Paul I know that they can hear me yell/If they can't find a way to help her they can go to Hell." The second, "Thin Blue Flame," is a nearly ten-minute rant that follows the
Velvet Underground "Heroin" arc of tinder to spark to full-on blaze in a way that hasn't worked for anyone in a long time, but most certainly does here. The other cuts never reach the same heights, but standouts such as "Wolves," with its sunrise gallop and "Whole of the Moon"-era
Waterboys piano, and the languid "Monster Ballads" soar only inches beneath them. [A Barnes & Noble Exclusive Edition of
Animal Years was reissued in 2011 that included a bonus disc featuring
Ritter performing the entire album acoustic. It also included four live B-sides, two videos, and new liner notes from Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Tom Ricks.] ~ James Christopher Monger