Album Reviews

Olivia Jean: Night Owl

Olivia Jean
Night Owl
(Third Man)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

Itโ€™s easy to understand why Jack White is all over Olivia Jean, producing her first album, releasing her music on his Third Man label, and inviting her as support on his Raconteurs tour. 

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Like White, Jean was born and raised in Detroit and made the move to Nashville. Sheโ€™s also a multi-instrumentalist who is obsessive about her work. And perhaps most importantly, Jeanโ€™s musical sensibilities of punk, rock, pop, garage, surf, Brit Invasion and psychedelia align with Whiteโ€™s own influences. With her dark hair and pasty white complexion, she even looks a little like him. 

Jeanโ€™s sophomore release comes five years after her 2014 White-produced debut on which she played nearly every instrument. She not only self-produced this one, but works with a full backing band. That results in a more personal reflection of her idiosyncratic style. Call it โ€œpunk rocking surfโ€ or โ€œbubblegum garageโ€ — the latter from the discโ€™s press release — if you need to label the heavily reverbed guitar, thumping drums and girl group vocals that blend together on propulsive tracks like โ€œShut Your Mouth,โ€ โ€œSiren Callโ€ and โ€œRhinestone.โ€ Part Go-Goโ€™s, part older Blondie, and splashed with a whiff of Phil Spector (โ€œIf You Donโ€™t Love Me by Nowโ€ even kicks off with the iconic Spector โ€œBe My Babyโ€ drumbeat), Jeanโ€™s sound may be reminiscent of others but her approach is distinctive. 

Jean shifts into acoustic T Rex territory on a cover of the Flaminโ€™ Grooviesโ€™ โ€œBrushfireโ€ and borrows some Byrds-styled ringing 12 string licks to power the punky โ€œCan You Help Me.โ€ Sheโ€™s also concise, squeezing her songs down to the basics (only four of the 14 tracks break the three-minute barrier). Looking for ballads? Youโ€™ve come to the wrong place because even when โ€œThe Huntโ€ kicks off with tinkling piano, it quickly breaks into a growling, pulsing rocker closer to The Runaways than The Bangles. 

The roaring โ€œNight Owlโ€ — a tune that describes Jeanโ€™s late night preference — lashes out with a tough guitar lick any punk band would envy. Better still, every track has hooks and melodies that explode out of the stereo. Make sure you crank this up on some hunky floor-standing speakers, โ€˜cause thatโ€™s the way it should be heard. Itโ€™s a relentless retro ride thatโ€™s over and done in under 40 minutes. Only Jeanโ€™s somewhat thin vocals prevent this from being a modern day twang classic. But you wonโ€™t notice that small debit because the music is so involving, energetic, crackling and at times even frantic. 

No need crafting a playlist for your next Saturday shindig. Just push play onย Night Owl and let Olivia Jean do the work.ย