Album Reviews

Pert Near Sandstone Balance Their Bluegrass With Populist Appeal

Pert Near Sandstone | Rising Tide | Pert Near Music
Four out of Five Stars

Over the course of a 15 year career, which has produced eight albums and continuing kudos from the critics, Pert Near Sandstone has not only helped to define the Minneapolis music scene, but also helped further the connection between the ballyhoo of bluegrass and its ever-increasing populist appeal. While the band is clearly eager to express enthusiasm for the traditional trappings conveyed through banjos, fiddles, mandolins and clogging (yes, they have a full-time clogger in their confines), theyโ€™ve also been unafraid to occasionally push the parameters and add other elements to their musical mix.

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Granted, a certain archival feel remains a constant throughout Rising Tide, especially as it applies to the jaunty backwoods sway of โ€œCastles in the Air,โ€ the fiddle frenzy of โ€œWaterโ€™s High and Rising,โ€ the whoops and wallop of โ€œHell Iโ€™d Play,โ€ or the song that bears a title which isย  particularly apt for our era, โ€œNo News Is Good News.โ€ Nevertheless, the rocksteady revelry also allows for an aural assault of another kind, as found in โ€œKings and Clowns (which we premiered and talked with the band),โ€ especially in the closing codaโ€™s suggestive psychedelia. โ€œBorder Song Waltzโ€ meanders into another realm entirely, its mariachi horns providing a kind of south of the border saunter.ย 

The variety doesnโ€™t end there. โ€œItโ€™s Not Your Faultโ€ brings the Band to mind through a similarly tattered tapestry. Other offerings, such as โ€œStuck in My Mind,โ€ boast a celebratory stance thatโ€™s so instantly infectious, thereโ€™s no need to confine the music to a specific style. 

โ€œWe know what our strengths are, and what kind of direction we can go in with the music,โ€ Nate Sipe, one of the bandโ€™s multi-instrumentalists, told American Songwriter when asked about their diverse dynamic. โ€œIn typical fashion, we tend to go in a lot of different directions within each album. We have elements of old time, we have elements of rock and roll, a little bit of jazz, a little bit of country. We have a well-rounded eclectic sound. We donโ€™t just have a single voice. We do different things to keep the audience interested and to keep ourselves interested. Itโ€™s fun to be able to apply that to a single album. It becomes an interesting sonic journey.โ€


Indeed it does, and because the band boasts four individual songwriters, it further affirms that diversity. So too, given the fact that they share a player in common with their twin city contemporaries Trampled By Turtles โ€” that being fellow fiddler Ryan Young โ€”other influences are allowed to intrude on the MO. The result is nothing less than a riveting series of songs that ensure a creative consistency throughout. Itโ€™s little surprise then that Rising Tide finds Pert Near Sandstone at the peak of their prowess.