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Music > Reviews > The Avett Brothers ![]() The Avett BrothersI and Love and You(American/Columbia) US release date: 29 September 2009 UK release date: 29 September 2009 By Steve LeftridgeAre the Avett Brothers the Next Big Thing? They certainly bring formidable weapons to the sweepstakes. The Avetts, guitarist Seth and banjoist Scott, are two sweet-singing, super-handsome bros who harmonize on idiosyncratic, soulful folk songs about love and family and connection, the kinds of tunes that inspire lots of linked arms and swaying heads from their fiercely-devoted fans. Signs at Avett Brothers shows often read “Avett Nation”, which feels accurate enough when the crowds of plaid-clad grad students dig deep and sing along in ecstatic unison. The North Carolina band, rounded out by bassist Bob Crawford and touring cellist Joe Kwon, have built up quite a head of steam lately, releasing the well-received Emotionalism in 2007 and the Gleam II EP last year, which marked the boys’ strongest songs yet (and some sweet beards—Seth was looking pretty Pennsylvania Dutch there for awhile). It’s no wonder that the Avetts caught the attention of Rick Rubin, who signed the band to his Columbia/American imprint and produced their new major-label debut, I and Love and You. The results? Superb. I and Love and You is the Avetts’ best record yet, as Rubin has gotten hold of the Brothers at the right time, when they are peaking as songwriters and morphing into a different band, one that is realizing the limitations of their previous stage arrangement. For years, the Avett Brothers were a ramshackle trio, with Scott on banjo and kickdrum and Seth on guitar and hi-hat. The band made an impressive racket in this formation, performing blast-furnace versions of their mountain-punk rave-ups, but often the boys’ ardent vocals threatened to overwhelm the relatively thin instrumentation, and it became clear that the band needed to spread out sonically. The band’s evolution on I and Love and You is invested heavily in the piano, around which nearly every song on the new record is based. Scott and Seth take turns on the keys, but it’s the almost-complete absence of Scott’s banjo that is most noticeable here and that long-time fans find most lamentable. The Avetts throw in a few nods to their raucous stage shows—and, without a doubt, they’re a band best experienced live—with a snatch of banjo here and a full-throated scream from Seth there, but gone is the ragged, haphazard feel of their early work and the half-joking levity of tunes like “Distraction #47” from Four Thieves Gone. Still, while some feel that the rough edges are part of the band’s appeal, the new record makes an assured attempt at the big time by playing things straight. Rubin will, of course, get plenty of credit (or blame) for the group’s reboot, and the record does indeed contain his footprint, namely his sense of restraint. The producer has been a national treasure in getting artists to get back to basics, as on his vaunted series of records with Johnny Cash and his recent acoustic comeback albums for Neil Diamond. So while these songs are embellished here with some lush orchestration at times, Rubin has cleaned up the tin-can production of the Avetts’ previous releases and has encouraged the Avetts to streamline the songs. The result is a furthering of the smooth, mature songwriting of gems like “Murder in the City” and “Bella Donna” from Gleam II. I and Love and You starts off with the title cut and, as the lead single and the centerpiece of live shows over the summer, it’s a song they’re obviously proud of and for good reason—it’s stellar. The song is an ambrosial slice of heartland balladry, and with its piano intro, vocal harmonies, and the “You don’t know the shape I’m in” refrain, it feels like the ghost of Richard Manuel is overlooking the proceedings. The boys make a point of splitting vocal duties, with Scott on the first verse and Seth on the second, but it’s when they sing together that they maximize their strengths. The song appears to be about the healing balm of Brooklyn, but the universality that these guys are so good at capturing comes down to those three words that are hard to say. The banjo makes a cameo on the second song, “January Wedding”, Seth’s sweet-as-pie Appalachian-style ballad about the virtues of true love, name-dropping Audrey Hepburn, and getting hitched in winter. The Avetts are quirky like that. There’s joy in the repetition of the traditional folk melody, but the boys dig deeper with “Head Full of Doubt, Road Full of Promise”, with Scott singing cryptic lines like “there’s a darkness upon me that’s flooded in light”, which may be tough to explicate but contain the kind of earnest soul-searching that has come to define their lyrics. The song has an epic feel, full of close harmonies, a tasteful organ punch, and Kwon’s tender cello countermelody atop Scott’s piano lines. The Brothers finally get a little kooky on “And It Spread”. It’s a typical love story—you know, girl leaves, guy gets suicidal, girl comes back. It’s an acoustic strummer that contains some of the loveliest singing on the record from Seth although in the middle his vocals get a bit overbearing amid gunfire snare drums. It takes awhile to tell these guys apart, by the way. Scott sings with more unadorned directness and has a twangier drawl; Seth has a softer touch in general but has a penchant for screamy asides. He gets that chance on “The Perfect Space”, maybe the record’s most ambitious song, one that combines the elements that make the Avetts great. It starts with gentle piano and cello with Scott again taking up the topics like companionship and redemption—lines like “I wanna have friends that love me for the man that I’ve become not the man that I was”, are the kind that fans get teary-eyed about at their shows. The song takes a hard left as Seth takes over and gets briefly manic over a jaunty piano-pop middle section before the song resolves to a big luscious chorus backed by strings and anthemic drums. Most provocative line: “I wanna have pride like my mother has / And not the kind in the Bible that turns you bad.” Discuss. The boys keep it in chilled-out mode the majority of the time on this record. “Ten Thousand Words” is a timeless bit of ‘70s country rock, with Houses of the Holy guitars and Loggins and Messina vocals, that possesses Seth’s most delicate and adroit guitar playing on the album. “Ill With Want” is yet another piano ballad, this one a timely portrait of greed, “Tin Man” is a Jayhawks-ish alt-country tune about missing the feeling of feelings, and “Laundry Room”, a song they’ve been playing live for a year or so, was once banjo-driven, but now is sung over fingerpicked acoustic guitar and piano, a big improvement that features a timelessly-exquisite arrangement and careful playing. The brothers echo each others’ lines to fine effect and throw in a true bluegrass coda at the end with fiddle and Scott’s clawhammer banjo. The band rocks out just twice. “Kick Drum Heart” could have been a hit back in the early ‘80s, with its Casio beat and catchy, rollicking melody and the cute kickdrum thumps that punctuate the chorus. “Slight Figure of Speech” is even more fun, a surfy pop ditty from rock’s golden era, complete with handclaps and vocal aaahs and a supersonic rappy interlude. The album’s final tune, “Incomplete and Insecure”, repeats the line “I haven’t finished a thing since I started my life / I don’t feel much like starting now.” It’s a line full of irony because, while the Avett Brothers have had a productive run going on a decade, I and Love and You‘s new elegant musical direction and very strong set of new songs indicate that they are band that is indeed just getting revved up. They might remain too folk-fringe-y to be pop’s Next Big Thing, but the Avetts’ latest fully delivers on this band’s considerable potential. 29 September 2009
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Comments
worst album title of the decade!
Comment by dave — September 29, 2009 @ 7:31 am
Hmmm. It’s the ‘smoothing down’ of the ‘tin-pan sound’ that’s making me sadly lose interest in a band that I once found had wit, sophistication (in that raw kind of way), and good musicianship.
So The Avett Brothers are being sanded down to just another pop/indie band? And that’s a good thing?
I miss the rough grain. They’re losing me with this one. I hope they come back to themselves, and don’t lose it entirely.
Comment by Simone from San Francisco — September 29, 2009 @ 7:35 am
...not bad, but King Wilkie got to this evocative new place a lot sooner and more rivetingly with their recent disk (“King Wilkie Presents: The Wilkie Family Singers”), and they didn’t need Rick Rubin to do it.
Comment by R.B. Martin — September 29, 2009 @ 8:13 am
R.B. - King Wilkie had their second album produced by a Rubin acolyte, Jim Scott…
Comment by John from Florida — September 29, 2009 @ 12:52 pm
The new Jonas, I mean Avett Brothers record
So let us discuss “I & Love & You” and the songs that it boasts. Prior to the release, the super-fan that I am, I collected and archived 6 of the 13 songs that were to be on the album form various YouTube postings. And O man, they were good good songs! banjo blasting my face off, guitar town USA, screaming backup vocals, and dynamic—all in traditional Avett Brothers fashion. I was sure that Rubin couldn’t alter these jams (in a negative way) too much, because these songs were set and had the Avett Brothers sound and style all over the place. After I had grown accustomed to these songs, their energy, and their arrangements the time had now come for me to listen to the streaming and hear what changes were made and what the other 7 songs sounded like. After convincing the publicist to send me a link to the stream I put my head phones, closed my eyes, sat back and it was there that I began my journey to the land of “O shit man, what happened to these guys!?” Ok, that might seem a little harsh, so allow me to clarify. The songs are absolutely brilliant, the recording is crisp, and it’s a really good alternative rock album. So for the masses who are unfamiliar with the Brothers’ previous work this album will become an instant favorite. But for those of us who were familiar with the brothers of old it really is quite deflating. These songs are so polished down that that raw energy and raspy vocals and rattley instrumentation have all been mopped up. The former banjo and guitar driven songs have been pushed aside to make room for more piano than a Libarache tribute festival. As for the banjo, a signature mark of the Avett Brothers sound, it only shows up for 2 songs (and one of the songs is just the last 20 seconds or so).
I don’t know who is to blame, or praise, for this change; regardless if it’s the Avett’s or Rubin, I foresee the Avetts becoming a household name. Once we had the Brothers covering Woody Guthrie, Bob Willis, and Townes Van Zandt, and now I don’t think those songs will fly to their audience that will no doubt be comprised of thousands of screaming 13 year old girls, frat brothers hoods, and first dates. I foresee the Avetts being clumped in with the likes of The Fray and Ben Folds, and wouldn’t be surprised if one of these songs made its way on to a Drew Barrymore movie during some sort of New York City lovers montage right before the credits roll. I’m not saying this is bad, I’m just saying it’s different. Most people will say something to the effect of “Yeah I know the album is pretty radio friendly and low key, but its goanna be the live shows where you really are going to be able to experience the energy and passion of the Avett Brothers” and I would tend to agree, but that is only if you can get enough money to purchase your thousand dollar tickets before they sell out Madison Square Garden in twelve seconds.
“I & Love & You” is a brilliant record, it will for sure be a hit to fans old and new alike, it will make them no small amount of money, and will for sure be on my personal top 5 albums of the year; but in terms of musical let downs it is the biggest one I’ve had in 10 years. There was a time that I loved the Avett Brothers and I felt connected with them and like I was a part of what they did, if they had a cult I would have been like the chief evangelist and apologist for them, but with the release of “I & Love & You” I think I am growing luke-warm and might even apostatize (I heard that Eliiott Brood has a good one coming out, I think Ill have to check it out). Well Im off to watch the Avett Brothers perform on David Letterman, I wonder if the Jonas Brothers will come out and do like a dual brother combo, that would be pretty cool if Rick Rubin could hook that up!
Comment by CountryMusicPride.com from So Cal — September 29, 2009 @ 1:10 pm
...I’m aware of Scott’s involvement, but I heard what the band was doing well before he came into the picture, and they were well on their way!
Comment by R.B. Martin — September 30, 2009 @ 9:32 am