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Fear and Saturday Night
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Fear and Saturday Night
Current price: $12.99
Barnes and Noble
Fear and Saturday Night
Current price: $12.99
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Size: CD
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Somewhere after his shot at the big time with the soundtrack to
Crazy Heart
, the 2009 film that won
Jeff Bridges
his long-deserved Oscar, Americana singer/songwriter
Ryan Bingham
wound up sliding back into indie status. A smaller scale suits
Bingham
and so does age, both developments enhancing his world-weariness.
Fear and Saturday Night
is a smaller-scale album than 2012's
Tomorrowland
and it's lighter, too, finding the Americana singer/songwriter settling into a comfortable ragged groove. Ballads still reign, ranging from the sweet melancholy of "Nobody Knows My Trouble" to the delicate introspection of "My Diamond Is Too Rough," but these make the rawer moments pop, such as when he indulges in a bit of raucous Tex-Mex on "Adventures of You and Me" or rides on a
Bo Diddley
beat on "Hands of Time."
can't help but sound a little beaten -- it's that craggy, creaky voice, one that still sounds older than his years even if he's starting to catch up with it -- but that lightness (he nearly sounds sunny on "Radio") goes a long way, suggesting
finds not only therapy through his music, but life as well. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Crazy Heart
, the 2009 film that won
Jeff Bridges
his long-deserved Oscar, Americana singer/songwriter
Ryan Bingham
wound up sliding back into indie status. A smaller scale suits
Bingham
and so does age, both developments enhancing his world-weariness.
Fear and Saturday Night
is a smaller-scale album than 2012's
Tomorrowland
and it's lighter, too, finding the Americana singer/songwriter settling into a comfortable ragged groove. Ballads still reign, ranging from the sweet melancholy of "Nobody Knows My Trouble" to the delicate introspection of "My Diamond Is Too Rough," but these make the rawer moments pop, such as when he indulges in a bit of raucous Tex-Mex on "Adventures of You and Me" or rides on a
Bo Diddley
beat on "Hands of Time."
can't help but sound a little beaten -- it's that craggy, creaky voice, one that still sounds older than his years even if he's starting to catch up with it -- but that lightness (he nearly sounds sunny on "Radio") goes a long way, suggesting
finds not only therapy through his music, but life as well. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine