Album Reviews

Parker Millsap: Other Arrangements

Parker Millsap
Other Arrangements
(Thirty Tigers)
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

For the last six years, Parker Millsap has emerged as a consistent voice of Heartland roots fusion, delivering sturdy collections of originals that blend brooding folk with gospel-infused country every two years.

On his fourth album, Other Arrangements, the Oklahoma singer-songwriter offers perhaps his most accomplished set of songs to date, a collection of urgent, high-energy rock and roll that finds Millsap alternating between paralyzed yearning, determined resolution and high-stakes restlessness. Millsap spends the first half of the record setting the stakes in his warm Oklahoma rasp, laying bare his helpless lust as he channels the early 60โ€™s soul balladry of William Bellโ€™s โ€œYou Donโ€™t Miss Your Waterโ€ on the slow-burning โ€œYour Water.โ€ Three songs later, Millsap switches gears, offering up a plea for optimism in dark times set to an anxious, pulsing riff that recalls Wilcoโ€™s โ€œBull Black Nova.โ€

Millsap doesnโ€™t fully hit his stride until side two, which opens with the album highlight โ€œGotta Get To You,โ€ a charging statement of purpose that finds Millsap โ€œcutting through the chatterโ€ as he drives down the highway. โ€œIโ€™ve been awake all night/ Iโ€™m gonna sleep when they kill me,โ€ Millsap sings as he zeroes in on his task at hand: driving to get to his girl.

Millsap spends much of the second half Other Arrangements impatiently driving around the country searching for purpose, a storytelling settingย he makes great use of. On โ€œSome People,โ€ he turns run-of-the-mill road-rage into an impassioned statement on the state of mankind. When he does stop to get out of the car, he spins a moving tale of momentary bliss on โ€œGood Night.โ€

On his latest album, Millsap continuously plays with the tension between motion and stability, and the result is a rewarding, weighty LP that will surely serve as a trusty emotional roadmap for years to come.ย