A long tall Texan with a voice like
George Strait (and, oddly, a distinct facial resemblance to
Brian Eno, of all people), south Texas native
Max Stalling has maintained a low-profile but steady career in the neo-traditionalist country scene for several years, but
Topaz City is his potential breakthrough.
Stalling's three previous albums were rough-edged D.I.Y. affairs, but the more polished
Topaz City, his first album recorded with an outside producer in a proper studio, adds just enough of a Nashville gloss to make the pure country tunes sound a little more like something that might actually get played on contemporary country radio. Opening track "If Only the Good Die Young" throws percussion and a subtle mariachi trumpet into the mix, for example. However, even with the hook line "If only the good die young, I might live forever," the tone isn't hell-raising rebellion à la
Waylon Jennings, but a more
Randy Travis style of suburban-Texas gentility.
Stalling has a voice for ballads, so much so that even a playful 2-step like the lyrically tongue-twisting "Ping Pong, Pool" has an easygoing sway. This is not country that rocks, but rather, country that sounds best on a too-warm, humid night out on the porch. ~ Stewart Mason