‘Tis the season for country-themed side projects. Just a few weeks before
Mt. Desolation’s release,
Tired Pony -- another indie rock supergroup with rootsy inclinations -- issued their own debut. What was billed as a country album turned out to be little more than standard pop/rock, though, which makes
Mt. Desolation’s debut -- recorded by a loose group of British musicians, with
Keane's
Tim Rice-Oxley and
Jesse Quin serving as co-captains -- all the more charming. The best songs here sound like genuine Americana, not pop songs dressed up in acoustic guitars and cowboy shirts, and even the filler material has a cohesion that’s rare for most first-time supergroups. “The Midnight Ghost,” with its barroom ambience and harmony vocals, is a woozy Western ballad that takes its cues from
Patsy Cline and
Loretta Lynn, while “Platform 7” -- featuring
the Killers’
Ronnie Vannucci on percussion -- is bar band country-rock, filled with all the twangy trimmings that
the Killers attempted (with mixed results) on
Sam’s Town. Both of those highlights are pushed toward the back end of
Mt. Desolation, and while that makes the album a tad bottom-heavy, it also means the track list doesn’t lose steam as it moves into its second half. Side projects with revolving lineups often result in scattered, hit-or-miss albums, but
Mt. Desolation seems to be the exception. ~ Andrew Leahey