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Reviews - Aram - Splendid
Ezine
With a musical sensibility shaped by the earnest,
purple prose style of '70s singer-songwriter mainstays like James Taylor,
Ghosts in a Season glides from the speakers like a warm night breeze through
a car window. Traveling a peripatetic path down the backroads of Georgia,
California, Alabama, Maine and points unknown, the album ultimately leads
not to a destination, but to the haunted season of its title. Dwelling
almost entirely in an autumn twilight, these narrators are shaded with
longing and a desire to reconnect with the past. The jangly guitars of
"Bigger Highway" add a touch of early REM to the album, which uses guitar,
vocal, drums, and bass as well as piano and occasional strings. A few
tracks sink: the gently evocative lyric of "I Can't Remember Your Name"
("I can't remember your name/but I remember you were beautiful") drowns
in diabetes-inducing piano and strings. Aram's lyrics occasionally spill
into cliché, but for the most part touch compelling and emotionally
tender spots, like "November"'s opening line, "I was just thinking of
the love/I was afraid to ask for/And I can hear that fear come/Knockin'
down my back door." To call an album "radio-ready" can in these days of
corporate radio be an outright insult, but an autumn evening, a country
road and Aram's songs on the car radio could keep you driving all night.
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