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Music review: Frank Turner – ‘Positive Songs for Negative People’

2 min read
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Throughout his career, Frank Turner has consistently demonstrated a strong penchant for penning songs of passionate lyrics that evoke vivid images about coping with the daily struggles of everyday life.

The introspective bluntness of 2013ĢƵ “Tape Deck Heart” received critical acclaim and quickly became a personal favorite of mine.

While “Tape Deck Heart” unleashed a moving journey of physical and emotional scars left from broken relationships, self doubt and reckless behavior, the 33-year-old singer-songwriter focuses on themes of recovery and optimism on his latest album.

Recorded in a little over a week in a Nashville studio with Butch Walker handling the production, “Positive Songs for Negative People” has the constitution of a spontaneous recording.

“By the waters of the Thames/I resolve to start again,” confidently declares Turner on the opening track, “The Angel Islington.” The gentle acoustic number vows not to dwell on past mistakes and move ahead in a determined and focused manner.

“Get Better” follows with a raucous pub-rock sound that drives Turner to passionately confess, “I’m trying to get better because I haven’t been my best.”

Folk flavorings sweeten free-flowing tracks like “The Opening Act of Spring” and “Love Forty Down,” while “Glorious You” and “The Next Storm” take it up a notch with Turner fervidly singing, “Rejoice, rebuild, the storm has passed.”

“We used to fit like mittens but never like gloves,” sings Turner on “Mittens,” soberly describing the loneliness that follows after coming to terms with a failing relationship.

The final two tracks bring the album to a touching close.

“Silent Key” honors the memory of Christa McAuliffe, one of the seven astronauts who died on the Space Shuttle Challenger in 1986. Turner follows by delivering a heartfelt acoustic eulogy for a fallen friend on “Song for Josh.”

Turner has described his latest offering as a summation of his first five releases.

Elements of punk, folk, rock and pop blend harmoniously together to produce 12 songs of infectious melodies and detailed storytelling. Turner makes a Pittsburgh appearance at Mr. Smalls on Sept. 19.

Clint Rhodes is the ĢƵ music reviewer. He can be reached at crhodes@heraldstandard.com.

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