Lambchop,
Vic Chesnutt, and
Bright Eyes collaborator
Alex McManus' second Misra-released
Bruces record begins with an atonal acoustic guitar riff that slowly reveals itself as being decidedly memorable. That sentiment works for much of The Shining Path, a wide preplanted corn field of a record that grows before your ears with each repeated listen.
McManus spins elegant tales firmly planted in the Midwest and rooted in Northern imagery. Wrapped in banjos, mandolins, accordions, and anything else with a few strings or rusty keys, songs like "Beautiful Slanted Northern Light," which wouldn't have seemed out of place on
Led Zeppelin III, come in like a cold front that blew in with the rain. Vocally,
McManus' throaty cadence is like a combination of
Michael Stipe and
the Pinetop Seven's Darren Richard fronting
Big Star, and the tendency to rise up or slide down to the note makes for an effective focal point amidst the serpentine arrangements. There's a lazy and amiable quality to tracks like "Far East Sweet" and "Fine Solutions" that belie the recording's murky atmospherics. There's a subtle undercurrent of dread that lurks beneath The Shining Path, and it takes a few spins to come to fruition. That a record can convey emotion so taut with impending ferocity is a rare thing indeed, and
the Bruces are more than adept at keeping the tension solidly mounted. Like a green wall of clouds that may or may not contain an F4 tornado, the listener is constantly checking the radar for further updates. ~ James Christopher Monger