Best New Music

Eight Essential Career Tracks from Brian Fallon

Photo by Drew Gurian

โ€œIโ€™da Called You Woody, Joeโ€ (2007)

This fast-paced love letter to Clash frontman Joe Strummer was a burst of roots-punk energy on Gaslightโ€™s thrillingly raw debut album Sink Or Swim. By nodding to Dylanโ€™s โ€œSong To Woody,โ€ the band made their full range of musical allegiances โ€” from 60โ€™s folk to 90โ€™s hardcore โ€” clear from the get-go.

โ€œBlue Jeans And White T-Shirtsโ€ (2008)

โ€œIt was the first time I wrote something that connected in a way that was beyond my band, or me,โ€ Fallon says of his 2008 devotional to the Jersey seashore that serves as his modern day โ€œ4th Of July (Asbury Park).โ€ These days, โ€œBlue Jeansโ€ is just about the only Gaslight Anthem song Fallon still plays during his solo sets, a recognition, says the songwriter, that the song no longer belongs to him, or his band, but rather, to his longtime fans. โ€œThis is a song for our people, the one Iโ€™m not going to take any credit for.โ€

โ€œThe โ€˜59 Soundโ€ (2008)

The bleeding-heart title track to Gaslightโ€™s breakthrough record would immediately became the bandโ€™s signature song, despite itโ€™s devastating subject matter and arcane Charles Dickens references. โ€œYoung boys, young girls,โ€ Fallon sang, transforming personal tragedy into a generational statement, before the songโ€™s final chorus, โ€œainโ€™t supposed to die on a Saturday night.โ€

โ€œThe Backseatโ€ (2008)

The concluding moment to The โ€˜59 Sound was a restless reflection on teenage road trips and summertime boredom that provided Gaslight with a bona fide rock and roll anthem. The song would serve as their climactic set-closer for years to come, and with its mix of youthful heartbreak, yearning and aching nostalgia, the song perfectly wrapped up the bandโ€™s greatest album.

โ€œThe Diamond Church Street Choirโ€ (2010)

The group had already moved on from The โ€˜59 Sound by the time they recorded their widely-anticipated follow-up American Slang, but this feel-good party tune was more inspired by 50โ€™s doo-wop than anything Fallon had ever written. The roots rock sing-along tribute to the bandโ€™s New Brunswick house-show roots would become an instant fan favorite.

โ€œLadykillerโ€ (2011)

This moody, slow-burning track from Fallonโ€™s debut side project, the Horrible Crowes, is a dark-tinged meditation on romantic devastation inspired by the Cure. โ€œAnd how about this for a good one?โ€ Fallon sings during the songโ€™s gut-punch second verse: โ€œMaybe we donโ€™t ever come down.โ€

โ€œ45โ€ (2012)

Gaslightโ€™s first single on a major label was the most convincing โ€” and infectious โ€” bid they ever made at rock radio stardom. Fallon shouts out some of his favorite 90โ€™s punk forebears in this catchy pop-rock barnburner about starting over anew. โ€œI canโ€™t move on,โ€ Fallon sings, โ€œand I canโ€™t stay the same.โ€

โ€œSmokeโ€ (2016)

First recorded with his one-off folk-roots outfit Molly & The Zombies, this Fallon mid-tempo ballad would end up serving as the highlight to his official solo debut on Painkillers. The song, a stream of consciousness narrative inspired in part by a long distance relationship, shows Fallon at the height of his craft.

READ OUR FEATURE ON BRIAN FALLON HERE.