Reviews

Josh Ritter: The Beast In Its Tracks

Josh-Ritter-The-Beast-in-Its-Tracks-e1355249577693

Josh Ritter
The Beast In Its Tracks
(Pytheas)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

Josh Ritter has built a sturdy career off the indirect love song. Ritter, who has never had much more to sell than a bright smile and a bunch of great songs, has always let his clever wordplay and literary sensibilities render and define his big-hearted romanticism. If man and woman fall in love at the end of the world, like in his signature โ€œTemptation Of Adam,โ€ their attraction is shrouded in metaphor and twisted into biblical allegory. โ€œRight Movesโ€ and โ€œKathleen,โ€ two of his most well known songs, focus as much on innocent goodwill and youthful hope as they do love and sex.

Sometimes, it works the other way. โ€œI wrote a record which I meant to write about this country,โ€ Ritter has said of his breakthrough opus The Animal Years, โ€œand it all came out sounding like a love song.โ€ After ten-plus years and seven full-length albums, Ritter has thus steered clear of the unavoidable โ€œconfessionalโ€ label that plague so many contemporary roots singer-songwriters. โ€œThe real exciting part about writing is the chance to get outside yourself,โ€ he once explained, โ€œthereโ€™s a lot of books out there about guys who are writers in Brooklyn; Iโ€™d rather write about other stuff.โ€

It should come as little surprise, then, that Ritterโ€™s recent transition into the first-person autobiographical has been slow and quiet. In 2011, without hardly a bit of publicity, he released Bringing In The Darlings, an EP stunning in its unprecedented pop confession and fragile directness. Ritter was suddenly crooning sweet three and a half-minute singles fit for a golden age of radio he once longed for.

The Beast In Its Tracks, the Idaho nativeโ€™s first full-length album in three years, fleshes out and expands upon Bringing In The Darlingsโ€™ tender balladry. This is a new Josh Ritter, a songwriter whoโ€™s realized his own story is worth singing. But the decision to turn in on the self may have been more a functional necessity than a deliberate aesthetic choice: โ€œAll heartbreak is awful โ€“ my broken heart wasnโ€™t unique,โ€ Ritter explains of his divorce and his new recordโ€™s genesis in the liner notes, โ€œBut these songs were helping me get through the night and I didn’t have the strength to care or question.โ€

Ritterโ€™s new record centers around two lovers, one past, the other present. On the albumโ€™s best songs, the singer spends his energy convincing himself heโ€™s over a tough breakup and in a better, happier place with his new-found love. โ€œHopeful,โ€ the recordโ€™s centerpiece, revolves around both women rallying together under a common cause: wishing Josh the best. Much of The Beast In Its Tracks takes on the premise of Dylanโ€™s โ€œMost of The Time,โ€ exposing oneโ€™s own vulnerability through a shaky persistence to ensure that everythingโ€™s just fine, when clearly itโ€™s not. โ€œIโ€™ve got a new lover now, I hope youโ€™ve got a lover too,โ€ Ritter sings with a bright grin on his face in โ€œA New Lover,โ€ a song that sings the praises of fresh love, until the final reveal: โ€œbut if you are sad and your are lonesome, and you got nobody new, Iโ€™d be lying if I said that didnโ€™t make me happy too.โ€ The Beast In Its Tracks triumphs this messy, sometimes undignified emotional complexity, placing venom and malice alongside cheery faith and fresh optimism.

The Beast In Its Tracks is a gracious, relentlessly honest, post-breakup record. The songs are straightforward and immediate, their production small-scaled and warm. Ritterโ€™s in love again, but he canโ€™t help having flashbacks. โ€œShe only looks like you in a certain kind of light,โ€ he sings on two separate songs, but that doesnโ€™t mean heโ€™s not trying to bury the hurt.

The albumโ€™s closer, โ€œLights,โ€ finds Ritterโ€™s double-tracked crooning alongside an acoustic guitar and faint, minimal percussion. In the albumโ€™s most intimate moment, he sings โ€œevery heart on earth is dark half the time,โ€ a way of saying that with love, sad endings are hard to avoid and new beginnings even harder to find, or maybe just a reminder, perhaps, that there comes a time to explore your very own half-dark heart and tell its story.