The hook-laden “Her Diamonds” opens the album; it features taiko drums and a singalong chorus. Lyrically, Thomas revives his empathy with the mysterious “she” often present in many of his songs (“And she says ooh, I can’t take no more, her tears like diamonds on the floor”). The charming, alterna-pop tune, “Gasoline” coasts along on an appealing, shuffling rhythm.
On several tracks, Cradlesong mines musical motifs of the ’80s. Relationship kiss-off anthem “Mockingbird” has a New Wave-ish opening. Likewise, “Give Me the Meltdown” contains a bassline eerily similar to the one in Simple Minds’ “Alive and Kicking.”
Among the album’s standouts are the bluesy “Still Ain’t Over You”, which opens with a hard, crunching riff and features appropriately angst-ridden lyrics (“You keep breakin’ me down, but I still ain’t over you”). In both melody and temperament, “Hard On You” recalls Go West’s 90’s hit “King of Wishful Thinking.” This song is the kind of effortless pop Thomas has been churning out since the mid-90s, and it proves that his best songwriting is the kind that avoids bombast and unnecessary oversinging.
Elsewhere, crunchy sound effects open the seething, claustrophobic “Natural”, a fitting soundscape for its vaguely existential narrative (“Are we just sitting here, waiting on the end, like it’s only natural”).
Of course, it wouldn’t be a Rob Thomas album without a few banal moments. For instance, while the title track begins promisingly with gentle acoustic guitar, it isn’t long before it devolves into trite power ballad territory. “Fire On the Mountain” is the requisite environmental anthem (“How do you sleep when the city’s burning”). Unfortunately, the song’s larger-than-life production overwhelms anything Thomas is saying.
Most appalling, though, is “Snowblind”, which is the worst kind of album filler: clunky, labored and not at all musically interesting. On such tracks, the 14-song album begins to wear out its welcome.
So it’s smart of Thomas to end the album with its most affecting moment: “Getting Late”. The song begins with just acoustic guitar and the singer’s voice, before eventually taking on a hymn-like quality. Soon, an organ further infuses the song with a sense of spirituality and it’s not long before the listener is nodding along and ready to hit repeat.
More than a decade into his career, Rob Thomas is gamely holding down the fort in the middle of the road, and a good thing, too, because where would the fringes be without the middle?
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