Album Reviews

Dustin Welch Makes a Dark Return on ‘Amateur Theatre’

Dustin Welch | Amateur Theater | (Super Rooster)

3.5 out of 5 

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Dustin Welch has always aspired to more than merely procuring his talents as a singer/songwriter. In the decade or so since heโ€™s been making his own music, heโ€™s released three albums, the latest of which, Amateur Theater, is, by turns, his darkest and most revealing yet. A tangled collection of sinister stories and dire observations, it finds him pondering lifeโ€™s challenges while finding fulfillment through faith and perseverance alone.


Welch, the son of singer/songwriter Kevin Welch, no doubt absorbed plenty of life lessons from his dad, and the fact that he has an able group of contributors assisting him in his efforts proves heโ€™s prone to recognize that the best players are necessary when grand designs demand to be fulfilled. In this case, his able group of associates include his dad Kevin, Cary Ann Hearst from Shovels and Ropes, John Fullbright, Jamie Lin Wilson and Mark Germino, among the many. The fact that theyโ€™ve shared Welchโ€™s journey from the beginning via his two earlier offerings โ€” Whiskey Priest (2009) and Tijuana Bible (2013) โ€” gives his ongoing attempts a consistency in terms of diligence and direction. 

That said, Amateur Theater isnโ€™t what one might otherwise refer to as an easy listen. Certain songs โ€” the call and response deliberation of โ€œPoster Child,โ€ the sinister-sounding โ€œMan of Stoneโ€ and the collected chorus of โ€œDresden Snowโ€ in particular โ€” boast the kind of ominous intimidation one might expect to find in a Bertolt Brecht/Kurt Weill musical melange. Other tracks, such as โ€œRock Hard Bottom,โ€ โ€œStick to the Facts,โ€ and โ€œThe Playerโ€ plow along with a solid stomp that drives the music with a seemingly unshakeable surge.  There are moments of respite to be sure, particularly those found in the weary ballad โ€œParanoid Heartโ€ and the equally expressive โ€œAfter the Music,โ€ but they mainly served to ply the more reflective portions of the narrative and bring some quieter musings to an otherwise turbulent travelogue. 

Ultimately, Welch deserves credit for sharing such perilous pursuits, one whose conclusion is by no means certain. โ€œWhen I reach that far horizon on a wing and a prayer, will you be waiting there,โ€ Welch asks his unseen muse on the albumโ€™s concluding track, โ€œFar Horizon.โ€ Given what appears to be a series of dire circumstances, the answer is by no means certain. And yet, he ably employs the means to keep his listeners engaged. Itโ€™s a frenzied but fascinating sojourn regardless.