Bookmark and Share
email this story to a friend E-Mail print story Print Reprint or license
Text Size:

tool name

close
tool goes here
Living - Faith & Values

Saturday, Aug. 08, 2009

Comments (0) |

Album reviews

Danyew

Danyew | 

Future of Forestry

Travel | 

Christian pop so often divides into 3:05 teen pop, AC worship or blistering metalcore, it's easy to get giddy when some terrific, thoughtful composition glides across the desk.

Give us two, and it starts to feel like Christmas.

Like the Yuletide season, this summer yielded a expected treat and surprise, both of which prove great things can come in small packages — in this case, EPs.

First, the surprise was Danyew, a new artist appropriately paired with David Crowder Band and Seabird for a fall tour. The six-song, self-titled debut is the product of multi-instrumentalist Phil Danyew. Cleary, he's trying on several ideas here in a disc that includes things like the jaunty Turnstile. But the tracks that make the biggest impressions are ones like Closer We Are and Beautiful King that build into airy acoustic-electric soundscapes.

With his sound, Danyew is playing in a park that Eric Owyoung's Future of Forestry has already been in for a while — and that his old band, Something Like Silas, occupied before. Forestry's latest effort, the six-song Travel, finds the always adventurous Owyoung exploring new territories for his work such as the acoustic-based Traveler's Song or gritty This Hour, which trades in reverb for distortion. The familiar, synthesized tone is back with Colors in Array, and the overall package shows Owyoung's skill as a song crafter and, dare we say, orchestrator.

The most satisfying thing about both of these short discs is they are the expressions of artists: something the marketplace does not always accommodate and something that is entirely appropriate in the context of worship.

Rich Copley rcopley@herald-leader.com

Comments

The Herald-Leader allows readers to comment on stories; the views expressed here are not those of the Herald-Leader or its staff. Readers must avoid personal attacks and libelous or inappropriate remarks, and users who violate our commenting policies can be banned from the site. See our commenting policy here. Some comments may be reprinted in the newspaper. Registered user names are posted with comments.

Quick Job Search