Sunday Morning
in Saturday’s Shoes
- Pop
- 2008
- Buy the CD
Reviewed by Jeff Giles
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It goes more or less without saying, then, that expectations are high for Sunday Morning in Saturday’s Shoes. With his last set of songs, Julian often sounded like Lyle Lovett singing unheard gems from Randy Newman’s vaults. How would he be able to improve on that?
The short answer is, of course, he couldn’t. Slow New York frequently used its soothing piano-lounge arrangements as a cloak for Julian’s sharply barbed lyrics; Sunday Morning, in comparison, is every bit as smooth on the surface, but lacks the bite that made songs such as “A Short Biography” and “Photograph” so easy to fall in love with. A handful of Sunday’s tracks – such as “A Thousand Days” – don’t do a good enough job of turning a personal story into something with universal appeal, and others – such as the title track and “Morning Bird” – never seem to work up enough energy to get where they’re going.
But is it a bad album? Absolutely not, and listeners who warmed to Julian’s Newmanisms on the last album will find at least a few new friends here. “Spring Is Just Around the Corner” skewers optimism for its own gain; “Brooklyn in the Morning” is a dreamy, pleasantly elliptical meditation on, um, Brooklyn in the morning; and “Man in the Hole” follows a refusal to change one’s mind to its ridiculously logical conclusion. The album’s highlight is “God III,” in which the lackadaisical exploits of Christ’s layabout, ne’er-do-well son are detailed to devastatingly humorous effect. (They actually parallel the upward bumbling of a certain Chief Executive, but he takes well-placed jabs throughout the album – and if that bothers you, you probably haven’t been listening to much besides Toby Keith and Lee Greenwood for the last four years, and are therefore outside Richard Julian’s target demographic.)
Call it a holding pattern, then – and as holding patterns go, not a bad one at that. After all the restlessness he displayed early in his career, Richard Julian has certainly earned the right to take a breather – let’s just hope it isn’t three years until the next album, and that whenever it comes out, he brings those barbs with him.
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