John Southworth's most immediately appealing album since 1997's masterfully baroque Mars, Pennsylvania,
Yosemite wears its Californian title proudly: the key influence on this British-born, Toronto-based singer/songwriter for his fourth full-length album seems to be that peculiarly Los Angeles-style blend of acoustic guitars, creamy vocals and unapologetically glossy arrangements that defined the softer side of '70s rock from the release of
Crosby, Stills & Nash's first album to
Fleetwood Mac's new wave freak-out Tusk. Opening track "General Store" has the bubblegummy bounce, complete with handclaps and the sweet-voiced backing vocals, of a classic
Partridge Family single. Elsewhere, songs like "Small Country Airport," the beautifully delicate "Simple Simple Boy," "Applecart" (which has a maddeningly brilliant whistled hook) and the simply gorgeous,
High Llamas-like "Old-Fashioned Rivers of Rhyme" manage the impressive trick of vaguely recalling
Surf's Up-era
Beach Boys without descending into shameless mimicry. Like all of
Southworth's albums, it takes a few listens for the songs' more subtle charms to manifest themselves, but
Yosemite is simply outstanding. ~ Stewart Mason