Recorded to tape in a log cabin in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah (so you know it's authentic), the debut album from childhood friends
Jonathan Clay and
Zach Chance (
Jamestown Revival) offers up a big, bright, and mellifluous set of meticulously honed, radio-ready, country-folk confections that blend tight
Everly/
Avett Brothers harmonies with breezy west coast melodies that invoke names like
the Lumineers,
Blitzen Trapper,
Band of Horses, and
Belle Brigade. The Texas-bred, Los Angeles-based duo sound like the well-oiled machine that their shared history would indicate, and there's a refreshing sense of professionalism at work on the 11-track
Utah that helps to elevate it above some of the more ramshackle, willfully lo-fi outings from other millennial folk revivalists.
Clay and
Chance may have been raised on
Woody,
Waylon, and
Willie, but they've got enough pop acumen to suggest a steady diet of the
Eagles and
Fleetwood Mac as well, and songs like the churning "California (Cast Iron Soul)," the rowdy, juke joint-ready "Revival," and the expansive, classic rock-infused closer "Home," manage to feel both wild and willing to please. That said,
Utah is hardly a bastion for wooly State Fair singalongs, as evidenced by the spare instrumentation and predilection for contemplative balladry in the classic
Loggins & Messina style that occupies the majority of its 44-minute runtime.
Clay and
Chance are first and foremost singer/songwriters, and while they may not have the forward-thinking panache of some of their contemporaries, they've got the voices to spin just about anything into gold. ~ James Christopher Monger