New Connection --
Todd Snider's fifth album and the second for
John Prine's Oh Boy label -- finds the singer riding atop a warm band featuring
Jason Wilber and
David Jacques (both of
Prine's touring unit),
Paul Griffith, and
Will Kimbrough. Like
Kevn Kinney,
Snider's voice alternates between a drawl and a scratch, occasionally dropping into
Jim White-like whispers. It is in these cracks that
Snider finds a wry strength, which he hangs on his almost traditional singer/songwriter wares. There are humorous tunes -- "Vinyl Records," "Beer Run," and "Statistician's Blues" -- but they're rarely anything more than cute. "Broke," meanwhile, sounds like a Nashville version of
Lou Reed's "Goodnight Ladies."
Snider gets a few elegiac beauties into the mix, too, including the subtly produced "Easy" and the almost heartbreaking "Class of 85." These are fine songs.
Prine takes a guest turn on his own "Crooked Piece of Time," which fits in with the rest of the record almost too well.