A gentle giant with an unassuming voice and a knack for distilling New Orleans R&B, Tropicália, and '70s soft rock into a sweet and smoky, Southern-style indie pop confection, Richmond, Virginia-based singer/songwriter and arranger
Matthew E. White's Hometapes' debut,
Big Inner, is part
Allen Toussaint, part
Chico Buarque, and more than a little bit of
Harry Nilsson.
White's musicality (he moonlights as the leader of avant-garde jazz band
Fight the Big Bull) is impressive to say the least. The soulful, sultry opener "One of These Days" serves as a great litmus test for what follows, casting a languid spell over the listener with its measured, neo-soul build and lush ornamentations.
White's gift for sonic world building is on display throughout
Big Inner's 40-minute run time, and while he may sound like a
Donny Hathaway-obsessed, Palace-era
Will Oldham, or an even less-interested
M. Ward, his old-school affectations never feel like shtick. ~ James Christopher Monger