Reviews

Ron Sexsmith: Long Player Late Bloomer

Ron Sexsmith
Long Player Late Bloomer
Ronboy Rhymes
[Rating: 4 stars]

The term โ€œold soulโ€ gets thrown around pretty loosely, but if thereโ€™s one modern songwriter who really fits the bill itโ€™s Ron Sexsmith. As a songwriter, Sexsmith has always had a way with writing about โ€œbigโ€ topicsโ€”love and heartbreak, doubt and redemption, meaning and the struggle to find it– with a sense of humble simplicity that recalls the authenticity of โ€˜60s and โ€˜70s songwriters like Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell. His latest record Long Player Late Bloomerโ€”which is his twelfth, for those countingโ€”is a timeless study in hopeful melancholy that amounts to his best work yet, and fans of his earlier work know thatโ€™s saying something.

The record comes after a two-decade solo career thatโ€™s received much critical and artistic acclaim (Sexsmith counts Bob Dylan and Elvis Costello as fans) but little commercial success and, lyrically, sounds as though this disconnect is beginning to really weigh heavy on him. Opening track โ€œGet In Lineโ€ begins with the lines โ€œheavy clouds are hanging around/and the sun refuses to shine,โ€ and plays like a casual kiss-off to all the wrongs Sexsmith has endured over the years, both personally and professionally. Tracks like โ€œHeavenlyโ€ and โ€œLove Shines,โ€ though, show that Sexsmithโ€™s trademark optimism hasnโ€™t diminished entirely, and likely wonโ€™t. Instrumentation on the record is tight, well-produced and walks the fine line between understated and interesting that does so well to complement both Sexsmithโ€™s voice and the stories behind his words. Long Player, Late Bloomer is a record certainly worthy of being played for a long, long time to come.