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Third Verse
Artist: Smalltown Poets
Label: Ardent Music [ForeFront]
Time: 10 tracks/41:26 minutes

Radio rock, lyrically clean-cut and musically polished to perfection has always been the Small Town Poets' forte and little changes on this, their third album.

Catchy opener "Every Reason" is a great tune with a somewhat heavier beat than previous offerings, and threatens the killer blow which, unfortunately, this album never delivers. Most of the songs offered here have an immediate pop-rock accessibility but fail to generate much in the way of energy or innovation, save perhaps "The Line," and a cover of the 77s "The Lust, the Flesh, the Eyes and the Pride of Life," both of which are satisfyingly frayed around the edges.

Conversely, the Poets mine the pits of blandness in the album's second cover, a laboriously dull reworking of the Choir's classic worship song "Beautiful, Scandalous Night." Whereas the most recent recording of this song by the Choir is wonderfully spacey and genuinely innovative, here it is a religious-sounding dirge with nothing creatively commendable.

This religious tone stretches across the breadth of the album, from the smooth CCM-ish backing vocals on "Any Other Love" to the refrain of "No Kinder Saviour," where Michael Johnston sings, "Hallelujah, Hallelujah/ Sing the blessings sing them down," with a markedly churchy feel. Along with most of the material here, these songs prove that while the Poets know how to write good tunes, they have yet to deliver them in a fresh way that has appeal beyond the borders of Nashville CCM. As could be said of many ForeFront bands, although it often sounds pretty, it just ain't rock n roll.

Shelby Foster 12/10/2001


 
 

 

   
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