David Woodard “Get It Good”
David Woodard from Nashville, Tennessee, makes a great impact with Get It Good, which shows off all of his power pop influences. With his signature sweet melodies and harmonies, this eleven-song album features some of his catchiest songs yet.
David’s lyrics aren’t obtuse, he says what’s on his mind, and you get it immediately. He launches things with the biographical jangling gem “Last of the Full Grown Men,” about a midlife crisis and picking up that guitar to take a “break from the insanity.” The mid-tempo “Get it Good” boasts a great bridge full of harmonies, and “I Can’t Make the World a Better Place” gets across the frustrations of the world today and the limits of what a musician can do.
His glorious Beatlesque side comes through on “Flower Power in the 80s” and “I Used To Be Cool.” These great catchy songs contrast with the calm tone and adult-oriented anxiety of “Riptide.” The 80’s rock riffs appear on “Grace Under Pressure” and “Coming to Life.” It finishes with the delicate “Only What Love Requires,” including a subtle piano melody and strings. There are more than enough great songs here to make this one highly recommended.
Ward White “Here Come The Dowsers”
Ward White weaves together character vignettes voiced by many personas in his new album Here Come the Dowsers, which explores the disillusionment they all feel for the movie business. The concept album is a good way to tell the story from different points of view, and it also gives White a chance to add an emotional twist to each tune. There are several notable tracks here. Starting with “Continuity,” it’s an effective narrative of the life of a stuntman that soars musically. The title track “Here Come The Dowsers” equates the birth of a studio movie product with water divination in the desert of early 20th-century Hollywood. The swaying arrangement has multiple melody lines and harmonies.
“Our Town” is another grand melody about the cutthroat competition, and “Johnny Fontane” is about a producer stubbornly casting for The Godfather. The musical tone recalls Ray Davies and The Kinks’ early 1970s era in spots. “Pick Up Your Face” is a commentary on a starlet’s fleeting beauty, with a catchy keyboard chorus. Although the personalities and lyrics presented can become overly obscure (i.e., Louella Parsons), it doesn’t diminish the musical pleasure. This is an album that requires multiple listens to appreciate. Highly Recommended.