On the cusp of breaking out of the Oklahoma/Texas corridor,
Turnpike Troubadours have turned inward, hunkering down and honing their hard country on
Goodbye Normal Street. Where their 2010 album Diamonds & Gasoline was anchored on several songs with a rock & roll bent -- including a stomping cover of
John Hartford's "Long Hot Summer Days" --
Goodbye Normal Street gets into the dust and dirt of Texan country, the songs of
Evan Felker often recalling those of
Steve Earle or
Townes Van Zandt.
The Troubadours have a relaxed, broken-in virtuosity -- they're as comfortable kicking up the dirt on "Before the Devil Knows We're Dead" as they are laying back with a summery groove on "Southeastern Son," jerking out tears on the sad "Gone, Gone, Gone," or rocking & rolling a Cajun-inspired groove on "Quit While I'm Ahead" -- and this road-tested musicality perfectly suits the sturdiness of
Felker's songs, which never have a wasted word or melodic line. This understated nature can mean that
Goodbye Normal Street doesn't grab hold upon its first listen but it is, as they say, a grower, the kind of record that slowly reveals its depths and eventually seems like an album that you've always known by heart. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine