All of It's Gonna Change will satisfy
author: Performer magazine
Their country leanings seem to carry a Southern authenticity that is often lacking in Northeastern country acts. But in the same way that Texas isn't really part of the South, Cassavettes isn't really country. The same could be said about any of the styles one can pick out in their sound. It's as if they've distilled the geographic qualities of Texas -- on the border, but not across it, familiar, yet close to foreign -- into a musical quality...
If you like the first cut, then it actually isn't going to change - all of It's Gonna Change will satisfy. And it is not a stretch to predict that many will like that first taste and come back for more.
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a surprisingly fun piece of Roots-Rock confection
author: CandiedPop.com
With an easy country shuffle It’s Gonna Change conjures up images of flannel shirts, jeans, and high-top sneakers with a anxious but hopeful youth as kicking about abandoned grain silos littered with broken whiskey bottles and crumpled cans of beer. It is a roots rock album that pulls a page from the Mellencamp and Young songbooks focusing on the struggle to make ends meet and that twitchy state of boredom that is marks those final steps out of the teenage years.
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Cassavettes unlike their characters have found a way to take the best of the old
author: Indie In-Tune
Boston isn’t the town one thinks of when they consider alt- country, though when the Texans came north, meeting the Massachusetts native, The Cassavettes were formed and Boston became an alt-country town. The Cassavettes consisting of Scott Jones (bass and backing vocal), Mike McCullagh (vox, guitar and lap steel), Matt Snow (drums and backing vocals) and Glenn Yoder (vocals, guitar, piano, banjo and harmonica) combine elements of the old and the new. Their sound draws together aspects of the old guard, a jangly country-pop sound taken from the Byrd’s mixing that with the rollicking country-rock of Dylan and The Band. This combined with elements familiar to newer, poppier bands, such as the Counting Crows and The Lemonheads, produces a sound that is both familiar yet new and inventive. This theme of mixing the old with the new carries over into their lyrics as well.
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They make me long for some banjos and bluegrass and Americana
author: ThaBombShelter
Cassavettes are Texas by way of Boston. Furthermore, according to the readers of the Boston Phoenix, this is the best band in Boston. Now, I can't really speak for Boston, having never been to Bean Town, but if these guys were from Columbus, I might just be forced to agree. With some roughness around the edges and some grit in the recording, I can only imagine how great these guys might be live. They've got a sound like a soul-tinged love child of The Avett Brothers and The Old 97's. There's twang and dueling vocals and harmonica, which is just what this blogger needed once winter finally decided to make an appearance in Columbus. They make me long for some banjos and bluegrass and Americana (yes, with a capital f*cking A).
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