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Evangeline

The moving lyrics of Evangeline’s self-title track on their debut album, We’re Alright Down Here, sums up the entire message of the album: we haven’t been left alone, and though the road may be a difficult one to journey along, we have hope as we walk along.

By the time you read this, I’ll be headed far away / Past the redwoods and the sea / I will write you soon / When you wake by morning / Where my head used to lay / Silence sings / Itself a symphony / I’ll be back for you/Evangeline, don’t be discouraged or afraid / For I am with you though I seem so far away.”

Evangeline says they hope to accomplish conveying life’s struggles and challenges in relationships, pain, death, life, and faith through their music. “Evangeline” is a perfect example, along with their tracks “We’re Alright Down Here,” “All I Am,” and “Amy,” of the band doing just that. You can pull any song off the album and find one whose lyrics are unique and pleasing to the ear. They are beautifully poetic in form and sound—which is apt for a band whose name is the same as the title of the famous poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow’s poem speaks of two lovers separated for a time and the struggles that ensue from separation. The name Evangeline means “bearer of good news.” Evangeline’s music speaks to both of these references; the message of their music is that everyday life has struggles, but hope is present as well.

There is the case of a mistaken identity on the band’s part that I hope is addressed in the near future. The band’s website claims that they inhabit the southern rock genre, but it is far from that sound; their music is closer to that of acoustic rock or folk rock. The southern rock genre—which The Charlie Daniels Band and Lynyrd Skynyrd made popular and Kid Rock and Big and Rich are dominating—is the basis for most country music. While Evangeline follows southern gospel and southern rock trends of utilizing the guitar and piano, as well as using their vocals as an additional instrument, they maintain a distinct sound that you would hear in a coffeehouse or lounge in the northern part of the nation, such as Seattle, New York, or Chicago. Their current sound actually works in Evangeline’s favor, since it provides them with a much broader, commercial sound that will appeal to a larger audience, and I hope that they do not try to assimilate themselves closer to the southern rock genre.

While the first song on We’re Alright Down Here, “Rain,” opens the album up strong with an up tempo beat, for the most part, no other songs on the album rock it out like “Rain.” What makes Evangeline’s music unique is that it utilizes melodies that rely on melancholy sounds that are undercut by uplifting beats, further playing on the theme of hope through struggle. The fact that Evangeline’s music doesn’t play with up tempo rock tendencies is a positive. If their songs did not play their way down the road of reflection, it would not accomplish quite as much as it does. It is the way the lyrics intertwine with the songs’ melodies that makes Evangeline’s We’re Alright Down Here one worth buying.

We’re Alright Down Here is meant to work so that in the moments of reflection and contemplation, the listener begins to identify with and internalize this new perspective: the journey is long and, at times, difficult, but, “We’re holding our heads high / We wipe away the tears / To say we’re alright down here.”

Rachel Holmes

Rachel Holmes resides in Chicago where she works as an editor. She loves the city and vows never to leave it, citing too much writing inspiration from the abundant people watching available as her reason.

Saturday Jul 19th, 2008 • View all posts by Rachel Holmes • View all posts in Album Reviews

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