This is a great, confident debut album that doesn’t put a foot wrong. On first listen, I was hooked even before the first song, Boomboxes And Dictionaries, was finished, and the remaining 11 tracks didn’t let me down at all.
New Jersey four-piece The Gaslight Anthem blend anthemic punk rock spirit with Springsteen-influenced storytelling (together with a folk influence that recalls early Against Me!) to create a compelling, addictive whole. The warmth of frontman Brian Fallon’s gruff, gravelly voice easily engages the listener on tracks like I Coulda Been A Contender, an evocative regret-tinged mid-tempo rocker, and Wooderson, which draws the strongest of the Springsteen comparisons. We Came To Dance is an overt blend of classicism and modernity, with folksy delivery interrupted by gang vocal lines about punk kids doing the two-step, while the vital 1930 brings the punk influence to the foreground and The Navesink Banks in the middle of the album is a strong folk throwback, dominated by acoustic guitar and successfully replicating a traditional American folk lament.
I’da Called You Woody, Joe is a heartfelt tribute to the late, great Joe Strummer, but despite referencing lyrics from Clash songs, its driving rock‘n’roll is more akin to The Mescaleros – and more like The Gaslight Anthem than either. Another salute, this time to Bob Dylan, can be found in Angry Johnny And The Radio, a halftime dirge that livens up considerably towards the end.
The unforgettable chorus of Drive makes for yet another stellar cut on an album of terrific songs, the relentlessly rocking We’re Getting A Divorce, You Keep The Diner’s sing-along outro is irresistible and Woody Guthrie-like final number Red At Night (the acoustic counterpoint to earlier track Red In The Morning) makes for a memorable end to a truly wonderful album. I’m struggling to remember the last time I was so awestruck by an unheralded record from a band I’d never heard of.
The Gaslight Anthem play Enigma Bar on Sat Aug 2.
Owen Heitmann