You've got to wonder what was going through
Darren Jessee's mind while he spent six years playing drums for
Ben Folds Five --
Folds may have a knack for writing a witty pop tune, but
Firecracker People, the second album from
Jessee's subsequent project,
Hotel Lights, makes it clear that
Darren had far more subtle and cerebral sounds lurking within his heart.
Jessee and producer/multi-instrumentalist
Alan Weatherhead have filled
Firecracker People with spectral musical textures and melodies that sound subtly heartbroken even when they carry silky smooth hooks; like a friendlier version of
Chappaquiddick Skyline fused with
Ron Sexsmith's bruised but hopeful songwriting style,
Hotel Lights deliver graceful sounds that speak of the dark night of the soul without entirely giving in to despair.
Jessee's soft, burnished whisper of a voice is certainly the right instrument for these tunes, and between
Jessee and
Weatherhead, a small army of keyboards and guitars gives these songs their musical flesh and blood, and it's difficult at times to imagine that an album which sounds this rich was created by a mere four people (bassist Jay Brown and drummer
Zeke Hutchins, former members of
Tift Merritt's road band, are relatively recent additions to
Hotel Lights but hold down the rhythm with unobtrusive skill on these sessions). The craft of
Firecracker People is nothing short of superb, though it lacks the dynamics to make its 47 minutes as compelling as they could be; the album's gentle midtempo feel is a bit like a warm bath that feels soothing at first but gets a bit tepid with time, and this music could use some more peaks and valleys for the sake of texture. But that doesn't change the fact
Jessee writes fine songs, and he and
Weatherhead know how to make them come to life in the studio; if consistency is the flaw of
Firecracker People, it also means this album doesn't have a single dud track and it sounds great from first note to last. ~ Mark Deming