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Josh Ritter: Sermon on the Rocks

As its title suggests, Sermon On The Rocks is Josh Ritter's foray into what the singer himself calls "messianic oracular honky-tonk," often dispensed via a kind of traveling-preacher/snake-oil-salesman persona. Which means, in turn, that Sermon On The Rocks is lighter than usual on the sincere rumination that has marked many of its predecessors.

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Oct 8, 2015 • 1 min read

On Josh Ritter's most recent album, 2013's The Beast In Its Tracks, the singer-songwriter dredged through the battered ruins of his own post-divorce psyche. As such, the record looked relentlessly inward — to forgiveness and spite, to recovery and despair — as Ritter labored to examine his failed relationship from every angle. The result was as acerbic ("New Lover") as it was generous of spirit ("Joy To You Baby"), but most of all, it felt personal, even diaristic.

For his eighth full-length album, Sermon On The Rocks, Ritter takes a turn in the opposite direction — outward, toward other perspectives entirely. As its title suggests, the album is Ritter's foray into what the singer himself calls "messianic oracular honky-tonk," often dispensed via a kind of traveling-preacher/snake-oil-salesman persona. Which means, in turn, that Sermon On The Rocks is lighter than usual on the sincere rumination that has marked many of its predecessors. "Birds Of The Meadow," which opens the record, isn't Ritter's first examination of the apocalypse, but it's surely his fiercest.

Fortunately, it's an approach that brings out some of Ritter's slipperiest, nimblest wordplay — "When you get damned in the popular opinion / It's just just another damn of the damns not given" — and a few genuine head-turners. Not many singers could pull off a whopper like, "If you wanna see a miracle, watch me get down," but when Ritter gets there near the end of "Getting Ready To Get Down," it lands like a grand punchline.

Josh Ritter recorded Sermon On The Rocks in New Orleans with the help of his Royal City Band, which does its part to keep the record as fiery and loose-limbed as the songs require. But the closest comparison here, particularly in "Cumberland," is actually Paul Simon, whose wise and wordy searching isn't easy to emulate. Fortunately, whether gazing heavenward or getting down, Ritter is up to the task.

-Stephen Thompson, NPR

Tracklist:

1. Birds of the Meadow

2. Young Moses

3. Henrietta, Indiana

4. Getting Ready To Get Down

5. Seeing Me Around

6. Where The Night Goes

7. Cumberland

8. Homecoming

9. The Stone

10. A Big Enough Sky

11. Lighthouse Fire

12. My Man On A Horse Is Here

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