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Music review: Lauren Jenkins – ’No Saint’

By Clint Rhodes for The 3 min read
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Music review: Lauren Jenkins - ’No Saint’
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Rhodes

“No Saint” heralds the arrival of singer-songwriter Lauren Jenkins. For her debut, the gifted songstress crafts 10 absorbing tracks about life, love and heartache with country, pop and Americana leanings, making her a new artist on the rise.

“Give Up the Ghost” is the invigorating album opener that finds Jenkins making an impassioned plea for her lover to surrender the memories of another to the past and focus on what they have together in the present as she sings, “But two of us is one too many.”

The title track is a moving declaration of being unable to forgive someone for their transgressions as the pain runs deep and self-doubt clouds the ability for clear thinking with Jenkins confessing, “I know that you’re sorry, I feel it in your touch/But that don’t make me forget all the damage done.”

Heartache and recovery are prominent topics on the drinking tunes “Payday” and “My Bar.” Told from a womanĢƵ perspective, both arrangements highlight the lonely details about drinking away the pain one paycheck at a time at the local watering hole.

“MakerĢƵ Mark and You” continues the string of bad habits that Jenkins simply can quit. ItĢƵ an evening full of MakerĢƵ Mark and Marlboros with the intention of temporarily forgetting the hardships associated with a broken heart that simply refuses to heal.

“Cadillac” and “Running Out of Road” explore the need to hit the highway with a full tank of gas and no particular place to be in the hopes that a fresh change of scenery will shake the ghosts that haunt the heart.

“Blood” serves as the dark final number that describes the pain of watching a close friend slowly waste away from the use of drugs and alcohol and being unable to stop the inevitable as Jenkins declares, “Ripping all your veins out won’t change a thing/Painting angels black won’t wash away your pain/Dying is no way to prove we’re not the same.” ItĢƵ a great example of the vivid pictures Jenkins is able to create by penning strong messages that trigger a variety of emotions.

Jenkins will make an area appearance on June 21 at JergelĢƵ Rhythm Grille in Warrendale.

Clint Rhodes is the ĢƵ music reviewer. He can be reached at clinton43@me.com.

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