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J.
Bradley
Walking
the Motorway Home |
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You
could call him the rugged individualist. Or at least, the rugged instrumentalist.
He can give you a
punch-in-the-stomach history lesson on the mining industry’s demise
in a small Idaho town, then bring
you to tears singing about lost love or losing your mind in the Nevada
desert. He’s a sensitive, folky
crooner who moonlights in boogie bands called “The
Jesse Helmsmen” and “Skank
Ho Denial.”
Yes,
it’s hard to predict what’s coming next from this mercurial
musical bard.
But
J. Bradley is the curve ball we all need.
He
never met a stringed or keyed instrument he didn’t want to fold
into one of his tunes.
This impulse could be annoying in the wrong hands, but J.’s a quick
and thorough study.
And
if that doesn’t work, he just mixes out the bum notes.
His
words can be gauzy metaphor or camera-eye detail.
If the truth hurts, J. seems to be saying, ‘let it bleed.’
If
you’re hanging out with him for the evening you might accidentally
end up on one of his records,
playing or talking or boiling some pasta. He’s assembled half a
dozen All-Star bands of Missoula,
Montana’s finest to back him up, but somehow – whether its
bittersweet acoustic fare or
boiling rock – the music is unmistakably his. Etched in your mind
like rings on a tree trunk.
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