Former
Beat Rodeo frontman
Steve Almaas must be confused about the way rock & roll career arcs are supposed to rise (or fall). Working in a genre propped up by the twin pillars of youth and image, he's doing his best work in his forties. A series of criminally ignored solo albums in the '90s pointed the way to a new introspective direction, and the eponymous 2002 duets album with girlfriend and former
Speedball Baby bassist
Ali Smithsealed the deal, with
Almaas and
Smith buffing up their sweet
Gram Parsons and
Emmylou Harris harmonies on a series of country-tinged retro-pop tunes.
You Showed Me does nothing to reverse the upward trend. Equally inspired by the classic country duets of the '60s (think George Jones & Tammy Wynette, Conway Twitty & Loretta Lynn), and the chiming guitar work of
Roger McGuinn,
Almaas and
Smith have crafted a modest little pop gem that works just fine in the new millennium. The opening title track, originally a minor hit for
the Byrds and
the Turtles, unveils the template that is used throughout -- heavily reverbed guitars and heavenly harmonies. Although
Almaas and
Smith both take solo turns, this is primarily a duets outing, and the material is impressively eclectic. "What No Angel Knows" and "The Winner" are straight-up Bakersfield honky tonk lopes, and wouldn't have sounded out of place on a
Beat Rodeo album, but "The Lonely Sea," an early
Brian Wilson composition, is given over to
Smith's dreamy girl group vocals and
Almaas' multi-tracked harmonies that effectively mimic an entire
Beach Boys chorale. "Absolutely Free" is bolstered by guitarist extraordinaire
Mitch Easter's swirling, psychedelic "Eight Miles High" impersonation, while "#7" fuses a
James Joyce poem to what sounds like a traditional British folk song, but is instead an
Almaas original.
Almaas provides some withering topical commentary on a couple tracks, and is clearly no fan of George W. Bush. But those tracks are an anomaly. This is timeless pop music that could have emanated from 1966 or 2006, and it will most likely sound just as good a decade from now. It makes you wonder what
Almaas is going to do in his fifties. ~ Andy Whitman