CD: Alabama Shakes - Sound & Color | reviews, news & interviews
CD: Alabama Shakes - Sound & Color
CD: Alabama Shakes - Sound & Color
Second from Athens, Alabama's finest moves them forward impressively

Alabama Shakes' 2012 debut album, Boys & Girls, was well-liked by both critics and music-lovers. It was appreciated for its tuneful, sassy reimagining of US southern rock, via the persona, songs and voice of front-woman Brittany Howard. The question for album two, then - as always for young bands wishing to blossom both creatively and commercially - is whether they can perfectly balance new ideas and inventiveness with whatever made them likeable in the first place.
Where Boys & Girls unashamedly played with a retro template, staying within certain parameters, Sound & Color sees Alabama Shakes exploring new ground, having fun, and relishing new styles. Recorded in Nashville with Californian session guitarist Blake Mills, who’s worked with Conor Oberst, Lana del Rey, Norah Jones and many more, it runs the gamut from “This Feeling”, a pared back, sweet, strummed affair wherein Howard channels Prince, to the raucous “The Greatest”, which comes hammering at the listener like The Ramones and ends with a looping, dissonant jam redolent of the Velvets attacking “I’m Waiting For The Man”.
Howard has a touch of the chameleon about her, fitting easily into whatever the song needs, whether that be vocal stylings that recall Minnie Ripperton, Mavis Staples or Andre 3000. Yet she retains personality and character that makes these thrumming, rich songs enjoyable. The band support her all the way, happy to riff out like blues-rock monsters, but with a tightness, especially in the rolling rhythm section, that’s akin to mid-Seventies Fleetwood Mac. Especially worthy of instrumental mention is the six-and-a-half minute “Gemini”, which features loud, proud, stoned guitar that brings the Isley Brothers' “Summer Breeze” to mind.
All the above would be irrelevant if the songs didn’t stand up. On three listens, they appear to – although only time can tell if this is an album that will become glued to the stereo. Alabama Shakes have an innate understanding of sweet, easy melodies, an inner Burt Bacharach hidden beneath their southern rootsiness, and their second album romps home on the back of it.
Next page:
rating
Buy
Share this article
The future of Arts Journalism
You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!
We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £49,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d
And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com
Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.
To take a subscription now simply click here.
And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?
more New music
 Cat Burns finds 'How to Be Human' but maybe not her own sound
  
  
    
      A charming and distinctive voice stifled by generic production
  
  
    
      Cat Burns finds 'How to Be Human' but maybe not her own sound
  
  
    
      A charming and distinctive voice stifled by generic production
  
     Todd Rundgren, London Palladium review - bold, soul-inclined makeover charms and enthrals 
  
  
    
      The wizard confirms why he is a true star
  
  
    
      Todd Rundgren, London Palladium review - bold, soul-inclined makeover charms and enthrals 
  
  
    
      The wizard confirms why he is a true star
  
     It’s back to the beginning for the latest Dylan Bootleg
  
  
    
      Eight CDs encompass Dylan’s earliest recordings up to his first major-league concert
  
  
    
      It’s back to the beginning for the latest Dylan Bootleg
  
  
    
      Eight CDs encompass Dylan’s earliest recordings up to his first major-league concert
  
     Ireland's Hilary Woods casts a hypnotic spell with 'Night CRIÚ'
  
  
    
      The former bassist of the grunge-leaning trio JJ72 embraces the spectral
  
  
    
      Ireland's Hilary Woods casts a hypnotic spell with 'Night CRIÚ'
  
  
    
      The former bassist of the grunge-leaning trio JJ72 embraces the spectral
  
     Lily Allen's 'West End Girl' offers a bloody, broken view into the wreckage of her marriage
  
  
    
      Singer's return after seven years away from music is autofiction in the brutally raw
  
  
    
      Lily Allen's 'West End Girl' offers a bloody, broken view into the wreckage of her marriage
  
  
    
      Singer's return after seven years away from music is autofiction in the brutally raw
  
     Music Reissues Weekly: Joe Meek - A Curious Mind
  
  
    
      How the maverick Sixties producer’s preoccupations influenced his creations
  
  
    
      Music Reissues Weekly: Joe Meek - A Curious Mind
  
  
    
      How the maverick Sixties producer’s preoccupations influenced his creations
  
     Pop Will Eat Itself, O2 Institute, Birmingham review - Poppies are back on patrol
  
  
    
      PWEI hit home turf and blow the place up
  
  
    
      Pop Will Eat Itself, O2 Institute, Birmingham review - Poppies are back on patrol
  
  
    
      PWEI hit home turf and blow the place up
  
     'Fevereaten' sees gothic punk-metallers Witch Fever revel in atmospheric paganist raging
  
  
    
      Second album from heavy-riffing quartet expands sonically on their debut
  
  
    
      'Fevereaten' sees gothic punk-metallers Witch Fever revel in atmospheric paganist raging
  
  
    
      Second album from heavy-riffing quartet expands sonically on their debut
  
     theartsdesk Q&A: Soft Cell
  
  
    
      Upon the untimely passing of Dave Ball we revisit our September 2018 Soft Cell interview
  
  
    
      theartsdesk Q&A: Soft Cell
  
  
    
      Upon the untimely passing of Dave Ball we revisit our September 2018 Soft Cell interview
  
     Demi Lovato's ninth album, 'It's Not That Deep', goes for a frolic on the dancefloor
  
  
    
      US pop icon's latest is full of unpretentious pop-club bangers
  
  
    
      Demi Lovato's ninth album, 'It's Not That Deep', goes for a frolic on the dancefloor
  
  
    
      US pop icon's latest is full of unpretentious pop-club bangers
  
     Yazmin Lacey confirms her place in a vital soul movement with 'Teal Dreams' 
  
  
    
      Intimacy and rich poetry on UK soul star's second LP
  
  
    
      Yazmin Lacey confirms her place in a vital soul movement with 'Teal Dreams' 
  
  
    
      Intimacy and rich poetry on UK soul star's second LP
  
     Solar Eyes, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham review - local lads lay down some new tunes for a home crowd
  
  
    
      Psychedelic indie dance music marinated in swirling dry ice
  
  
    
      Solar Eyes, Hare & Hounds, Birmingham review - local lads lay down some new tunes for a home crowd
  
  
    
      Psychedelic indie dance music marinated in swirling dry ice
  
    
Add comment