A
Wood Brothers record will always be a fail-safe purchase, the reason being that the musical instincts of Chris and
Oliver Wood are as solid and unyielding as a 100-year-old oak.
Loaded, the duo's second full-length, satisfies wholly, living up to and maybe past the promise of 2006's
Ways Not to Lose. The biggest, most noticeable change is the depth of the songwriting: from the wistful, clear-eyed opening song, "Lovin' Arms," to the tender-hearted "Walkaway" to the quietly introspective closer, "Still Close," the brothers, who co-wrote for the first time on
Loaded, reveal a range of feeling as broad and earthily sophisticated as their jazz- and blues-flecked riffs. Soul, not the sound but the entity, is a major component too: while most non-reggae artists falter hopelessly when attempting to switch gears and adopt the genre's sunshiny vibe,
the Woods readily access a genuine breezy streak on "Angel," a cover of the
Jimi Hendrix classic helped along by buddy
Amos Lee. Another cover, of
Dylan's "Bucket of Rain," also works a kind of authentic, deep-down magic --
the Woods claim it fully but somehow respectfully. But there is one original that captures the imagination and the ear with unrelenting might: "Postcards from Hell," a folky lyrical mini-masterpiece, is a testament to two musicians whose chemistry is so potent it ought to be bottled. ~ Tammy La Gorce