Leftover Salmon/Brand New Good Old Days/Compass
Four out of Five Stars
Leftover Salmon have never made it easy for those pundits who may be determined to put an easy handle on their sound. In a career that spans over 30 years, the Colorado-based collective has gleefully blended a varied combination of bluegrass, rock, prog, jazz, and jamband sensibilities, while helping to create a new genre entirely, one loosely defined as โjam grass.โ
Videos by American Songwriter
In essence, itโs a populist precept that garners an overriding appeal from festival followers that have come to relish the instrumental dexterity shared on stage. And while it taps into certain traditions, specifically the fallow roots shared by the Grateful Dead, the Allman Brothers, Phish and others of their ilk, itโs also given rise to any number of fellow travelersโGreensky Bluegrass, Railroad Earth, Trampled By Turtles, Yonder Mountain String Band, and the Steep Canyon Rangers, among them.

Appropriately then, Leftover Salmonโs new album, the aptly-dubbed Brand New Good Old Days, is, in many ways, a return to their roots, one that finds them reunited with Compass Records, the label that helped boost their stature a decade ago, and, as befitting that companyโs stylistic stance, putting the focus on the mountain music theyโve favored all along.ย They acknowledge their early origins in the freewheeling โBoogie Grass Band,โ a song that deftly sums up the impact of those initial influences. So too, their commitment to the cause remains intact throughout the entire album, from the deliberate and demonstrative โRed Fox Runโ to the straight-on shuffle of โFlyinโ At Nightโ and the down-home ramble of the title track and the easy stride taken with โWaterfront.โย ย ย ย ย .ย
Thatโs not to say they refrain from tossing in some unexpected entries as well. A rousing bluegrass take on Soundgardenโs others morose โBlack Hole Sunโ finds them as adventurous as ever, while the subdued โSunday,โ penned by drummer Alwyn Robinson, allows for a more pensive perspective.
Nevertheless, with all their traditional elements in placeโDrew Emittโs deft mandolin, banjo player Andy Thornโs well-picked precision, Vince Herman in his role as guitarist and guru, and Robinson and bassist Greg Garrison effectively propelling the backbeat โthe momentum rarely falters. Appropriately then, the concluding track, โWeโll Get By,โ maintains a mantra of sorts, one that affirms their allegiance to the celebratory style thatโs made them the indelible icons they are.
Photo by John-Ryan Lockman/ย ShowLove Media
