Mon 26 Mar 2007
Jonny Lang has an incredible success story.
At the tender age of 14, Lang released his first solo record with the band he had joined after starting guitar lessons only months before stepping on stage. A year later Lang released Lie to Me which became his mega-hit debut solo album. The album went multi-platinum and Lang became known instantly as a blues guitar legend. I remember seeing Lang and his signature setup including a 1972 Fender Telecaster Thinline always paired with a classic Fender amp. You couldn’t open a guitar (or music) magazine that didn’t have a shot of Lang in it.
Nearly a decade later Lang has released a new gospel, yes I said gospel, album: Turn Around. I was instantly interested in this album. How has time changed Lang? What does a Lang gospel album sound like? Why gospel!?!?
I had to adjust my listening senses for a minute - traditionally I would not be listening to an album with this style. The choir background vocals, smooth falsettos, rocking organs, all were a bit out of place in my music library. In fact, the first go around I can sum up my expression: “what!?” I listened again. I found that the melodies quickly became stuck in my head. His bluesy guitar and musky voice (you would mistake this guy for someone many, many years older) is not disappointing. Tracks such as “The Other Side of the Fence” and “Turn Around” are rocking gospel-blues tracks that define Lang’s progressive style for the record. I never really appreciated Lang’s perfectly smooth falsetto until this album. “My Love Remains” and “Only a Man” are darn-near flawless. They are an envious performance by any artist’s standards; enough so that Lang took a 2007 Grammy for the Rock Gospel Album of the Year (a no-brainer in my opinion, although Red would have been an excellent choice as well). Lang cites his own personal sprituality as his reason for the gospel album. His lyrics are pure and heart-felt.
Lang sings, “The grass always looks greener, on the other side of the fence, but the dog over there might be meaner, on the other side of the fence… Stay in your own yard, play in your own yard.”
