Thursday, October 4, 2018

Wave 21 releases LP





I love the spirit behind this album. Wave 21’s debut is the sort of album capable of acknowledging life’s adversities but, ultimately, preserving through them with the knowledge a better day will come. Wave 21’s songwriting celebrates life’s virtues and marks down its inevitable failures. The tandem behind these songs, sisters Mary Lynn and Emmy Lou Doroschuk, open the release with the song “Ya Ya Ya” and it gets things off to a rowdy start. The rowdiness, however, has a high stepping sound, a first rate singer with Wave 21 lead vocalist Mary Lynn, and a band full of backing vocalists who bring a spirit of their own to the music. If you think the song title sounds too poppy, don’t close down and fail to give it a chance. The second song “Here We Go” is even more life affirming, I think, and has a sense of life’s adventure at its heart. There’s none of the electric guitar work heard in the opener; instead, acoustic guitars lead the way as they across much of this album.

“Love Shouldn’t Make Me Cry” is one of the album’s musical highpoints. I keep waiting and waiting for the song to come to some big time chorus, but it never quite does and the closest thing we get to any sort of classic style crescendo comes with and around the bridge. There’s a number of musical highlights during the recording and Wave 21 more than amply demonstrates their musicianship. This is definitely a cut above you’re average modern country rock fare. “It’ll Be One of These Days” is tailor made for mass airplay and hopefully gets it; the Doroschuk sisters really outdo themselves here with a song that touches on universal themes in a style and way any listeners will connect with. It’s one of the best acoustic guitar tracks, as well, on the whole album.

“Pink Party” is another of the more clear cut country rock cuts on the release. Mary-Lynn throws herself into this track with particular relish the musical arrangement has a lot of the same subtlety they bring to this style in order to make it more their own. The duo of “The Fun Times” and “Come To Me” couldn’t be more different, but they represent two of my favorite points on the entire album. The first song is a much more far reaching track, musically at least, and can be considered an unplanned showcase of sorts for the band to show off the full extent of their musical chops. The shift in tempo coming with the song’s second half really drives the song home.

“Come to Me”, however, is an unfettered, open-hearted love song and difficult to shrug off as fluff thanks to an exquisite vocal and beautifully melodic arrangement. The final song “Far Away” is, also, the longest tune on the album and Wave 21 more than live up to its place in the running order with a palpable sense of its importance. There are some hints in the song, for attentive listeners, of where they may go from here musically. I know I’ll be joining them wherever they may travel. 


Missy Engelhardt 

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