Signs, the fourth studio album by the
Tedeschi Trucks Band, poignantly addresses some of the major changes this 12-piece group has been through over the last couple of years. That said, it's hardly steeped in sadness, but acknowledges reckoning and acceptance while leaning on hope. In November 2016, longtime friend
Leon Russell died. In January,
Derek's uncle
Butch Trucks committed suicide. In May, mentor
Col. Bruce Hampton (to whom
Signs is dedicated) suffered a fatal coronary on-stage during his 70th birthday celebration (which
Trucks and
Tedeschi witnessed). The same month,
Gregg Allman died after a years-long battle with liver cancer. And in June, keyboardist
Kofi Burbridge suffered a heart attack that required emergency surgery.
These events had an obvious impact on
Signs, but it results in their most musically diverse offering yet. Sonically it remains in the band's trademark stew of blues, soul, rock, gospel, and improv, but also showcases a new songwriting sophistication and arranging skills. Co-produced by
Trucks,
Jim Scott, and
Bobby Tis, these 11 tracks engage the full power of
TTB beginning with the souled- out opener "Signs, High Times" that places all four singers (
Tedeschi,
Mike Mattison, Alecia Chakour, and Mark Rivers) alternating up front in a call to rise above the swamp of self-pity.
Burbridge's Wurlitzer is distorted and funky, and the horns blare in support as frontline players trade lines across a deep groove. "I'm Gonna Be There" is a gospel tune wherein
Tedeschi displays astonishing skill as a vocalist. The lyrics' affirmation in the face of darkness is offered with clean, resonant emotional power, underscored by the backing chorus and intertwining guitars from
Trucks and guest
Doyle Bramhall II, as well as a string quartet sumptuously arranged by
Burbridge. "Walk Through This Life" -- co-written with bassist
Tim Lefebvre (who has amicably left the group) and
Warren Haynes, who joins the backing chorus -- is a soaring soul anthem with popping horns and wah-wah guitars that
Tedeschi refuses to surrender to, no matter the toll loss extracts. "Still Your Mind" references the need for close community in the midst of life's challenges. Its music careens between garagey rock, loopy R&B, and nearly Baroque psychedelia. (
Trucks' guitar break is absolutely unhinged.) "Shame" reveals the band's musical growth and steely grit simultaneously. While
Tedeschi digs into her lyric with the commitment of
Mavis Staples, tempos shift, horns fold in drama, and
Trucks' guitars underscore the lyrics' emotional storm. "They Don't Shine" is an uptempo rave that walks a driving line between
Creedence Clearwater Revival and
Ike and Tina Turner with
Tedeschi wrangling her Stratocaster in the lead guitar chair. "The Ending" is a wrenching Americana elegy for
Hampton. Penned by the bandleaders with
Oliver Wood, it's about the man, his absence, and the wisdom and magic he imparted during his lifetime. It creates an unexpected yet fitting conclusion to
Signs, a recording that will surprise and delight
TTB fans as their most adventurous to date. ~ Thom Jurek