Elevate your local knowledge

Sign up for the iNFOnews newsletter today!

Select Region

Selecting your primary region ensures you get the stories that matter to you first.

Entertaining array of stylings on Jason Hawk Harris’ debut

Jason Hawk Harris, “Love & the Dark” (Bloodshot)

A single guitar solo is by itself worth the price of admission to Jason Hawk Harris’ world.

The climactic moment on the Houston native’s full-length debut album comes midway through the nine-song set. It’s a carefully constructed 24-bar coda to “Phantom Limb,” a wrenching song about the death of Harris’ mother, and the emotions channeled through his six-string are sad, angry, beautiful and enough to make you cry.

That’s not all.

“Love & the Dark” explores self-destruction, the great unknown and matters of the heart with bracing honesty and humour. Harris’ entertaining array of musical stylings includes a punk gospel stomper (“I’m Afraid”), a twangy toe-tapper (“Cussing at the Light”) and an arena-ready power ballad (“The Smoke and the Stars”). Harris’ training in classical composition shows in arrangements that benefit from a range of dynamics and surprising tempo shifts, along with lots of terrific playing and singing by the supporting cast. Harris himself sounds a lot like Jason Isbell, but that quickly becomes immaterial because his material’s so good.

For example, take album closer “Grandfather,” another reflection on the dearly departed. It’s musically inventive — cue the xylophone — with death undone in the powerful final two verses. Can’t beat that for a happy ending.

News from © iNFOnews.ca, . All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.