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Retro Review – The 59 Sound – The Gaslight Anthem – The Cranky Englishman
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Retro Review – The 59 Sound – The
Gaslight Anthem
DECEMBER 31, 2022 JP
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Retro Review – The 59 Sound – The Gaslight Anthem – The Cranky Englishman
There’s no hope of objectivity in this review as such. This is my favourite band and my
favourite album. But I’m here to tell you why that is.
The Gaslight Anthem convened in Los Angeles in 2008 to record this album, the follow-up
to their debut, Sink or Swim. Guitarist Alex Rosamilia would later note in an interview that,
“For Sink or Swim, we had a week or so and what we brought to the studio. For the last record we
had about 5 weeks and quite the arsenal of gear to tear through. Which did lead to a couple
ideas I don’t think we would’ve had otherwise.” I’m not sure there’s a better description of the
raw, rich, power of this album than that. While Sink Or Swim introduced some of the
hallmarks of Gaslight, be it the power rock sound or Fallon’s Jerseyite Springsteeninfluenced poetry, one can’t escape, on relistening, that it sounds very much like a lo-fi
album by a band at it’s very beginnings, still finding it’s way.
It’s perhaps surprising then that the second album became as seminal and lush as it did.
After all, for many bands, the second album is a tough exercise – still trying to find their
sound, still unsure of their voice. The 59 Sound sounds nothing like this. It’s rough, tough,
and powerful, and the voice has distilled into a powerful roar of wistfulness and hope. It’s a
band sure of themselves and sure of the songs, and for a newcomer to their music as I was
at the time, it’s a real exercise in grabbing the listener by the balls and taking them on a
journey. The whole album feels like being a young adult, driving a very fast car down an
open highway, with all the promise of youth open to you.
If that is the case, however, the opening three songs are the immediate smash of the
accelerator. The album opener, the runaway, fast-paced Great Expectations, would be a
tremendous start to an album for almost any rock band, but for one still, ultimately, finding
it’s feet, it’s truly incredible – a punk rock smash with emotional overtones, Fallon’s lyrical
mastery already apparent via the continued refrain ‘everybody leaves so why, why wouldn’t
you?’ – a wonderful song that leads into the most enduring of Gaslight’s hits – The 59 Sound,
the album’s title track. There’s some evocation of Springsteen here, at least in my mind – as
the tale of what seems to be a death via car crash while running away at the pace of the
song evokes memories of The River’s ending track Death On The Highway. Away from the
lyrical themes, it’s a soulful, emotional punch of a song, and I would say it still remains top
of most Gaslight fans’ list of favourite songs to this day.
The opening barrage ends, appropriately, with the third song, Old White Lincoln. Prefab
Sprout would have an aneurysm about the amount of cars and girls mentioned in this
album. Anyway, Lincoln is lyrically wistful, and probably one of the first Gaslight songs that
really transferred well to the acoustic format when used for various live sessions in later
years. The full range of Fallon’s lyrical romanticism is to the fore here, lamenting an old
friend no longer around for reasons unknown. I feel sure that, just as I did and do listening
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Retro Review – The 59 Sound – The Gaslight Anthem – The Cranky Englishman
now, everyone can feel someone when this song plays. It’s not quite as good as the prior
two tracks, but it’s part of one of the best three-song opens to any album in my view, and it
deserves its place, fitting perfectly as it does in the powerful, driving, sentimental rock that
this album is.
The most-overtly Springsteen reference on the album, High Lonesome, continues that trend,
set off by the driving drums of Benny Horowitz. While musically similar to the rest of the
album, lyrically I think this is some of Fallon’s finest work on the album, whether
referencing Springsteen in at night I wake up with the sheets soaking wet, it’s a pretty good
song, baby you know the rest… or the wham line of I kind of always sort of wished I was
someone else. The song seems aptly titled after a 50s film, harking back to the murkiness
and mystique of our dreams in the night – at once smoky, nostalgic, and romantic, but
juxtaposed with the lyrical punch of a dreamer fighting reality.
Having now ventured into the dark, murky feel of a 50s film, the 50s references, prevalent
throughout the album, continue to rain down on us, via the aptly titled Film Noir. After the
punch in the face of the opening quartet, this feels like something of a cooldown song, but
it’s no worse off for this, and is very welcomed. Soulful, almost crooner-like slow melody at
the start gives way to a bittersweet song, referencing more icons of the past, in particular
Marilyn Monroe. I think most songs can mean whatever you want them to mean, but this
seems almost grandiose in its portrayal of romantic drama and a failing relationship. It fits
perfectly with the emotional mood of the album, but is uniquely lacking in optimism for a
Gaslight song.
Miles Davis & The Cool seems to have all the optimism by contrast – a cheerful, upbeat song,
invoking all the romanticism of young love, requited or not. The yearning and pleading of
Don’t wait too long to come home invokes every single romantic dream any of us infatuated
by young love have ever had. On an analytical listen, the thumbing of nose at disapproving
adults and the belief that love could conquer all makes this probably the closest to a
Rosalita, Come Out Tonight that the Gaslight Anthem ever wrote, and it’s all the better for it.
The Patient Ferris Wheel is a crowd-pleasing power stomp, and the backing vocals of the
Mighty Mighty Bosstones Dicky Barrett adds a uniqueness to it. It’s probably the most
straight-ahead rocker on the album, an absolute tour de force live (which doesn’t quite
come through as well on the record), and it brings the power back after a brief cool-off
from the last two songs.
By contrast, Casanova, Baby! almost feels quasi-country in melody and rhythm. Even the
lyrical urging from Fallon for the girl to cast away her life and run away with him, while
feeling very Springsteen-esque, is classic early to mid Eagles in its simplicity – arranged
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Retro Review – The 59 Sound – The Gaslight Anthem – The Cranky Englishman
differently and written in the era the album evokes, this could’ve been a massive crossover
country hit. It’s a good song, and possibly the sweetest song on the album, fitting well into
the nostalgic, romantic, yearning feel of most of the songs.
Even Cowgirls Get The Blues might be the only average song on the album. While soulful and
melodic, it’s a fairly plodding number, although at least lyrically, it feeds in nicely, with the
lament of maturation and growing up providing an interesting coda to Casanova a song
prior. Maybe I’m down on this song more than others because of it’s realism versus the
prior romanticism – it feels like the loss of optimism, an acceptance almost, that youth
might be over, and the strength of all the feelings and emotions we once had are now
tinged by cynicism and worn down by understanding and life’s unique punch. Fallon’s
strength is to be able to lift an at-times middling song (not that there are many in the
Gaslight catalogue) to good or better with his lyrics. He tries manfully here and largely
succeeds.
Meet Me By The River’s Edge is a return to the rockers, invoking multiple Springsteen
comparisons, not least no surrender, my Bobby Jean. Whether this is Brian poking fun at the
amount of Springsteen comparisons by lazy reviewers by outright waving them in a
listeners face, I’m not sure, but it’s a portrayal of a confident band and man that they can
look these comparisons in the eye and write a song that could’ve come off any classic
Springsteen album and been beloved. This listener certainly believed in love and the idea
that your true love would run after you in the rain and tell you that they loved you when he
listened to this. Writing now, it’s hard not to feel the same way. While lacking in subtext,
sometimes great music doesn’t need subtext. This song says love me, be not afraid, meet
me there tonight, and we’ll start our life together. Much like Miles Davis earlier, the optimism
shines through this song, and it benefits from it.
Here’s Looking At You, Kid is the Wham Line of the album. Up until now, there’s largely been
optimism in the face of all. This song feels Cohen-esque in it’s lamenting of life’s loves,
losses, disappointments and heartbreaks, in some way. It’s heartbreaking, emotional, and
chilling in equal measure. I think this song is a complete masterpiece, and if Fallon wrote
ten more albums I don’t think he could capture the lyrical genius and depth of feeling that
his writing here evokes. I could write thousands of words on this song, but for the sake of
brevity of the article, I won’t. Just listen to it, and tell me it doesn’t evoke some memory of
something long-lost for you. It did for me, before I even knew what loss was. Somehow,
though, in the midst of all the emotion, it somehow still finds a way to make you believe in
success, love, and optimism overall. The best song on the album, for me.
Having drained us of all emotion and tears with the prior song (including this writer, right
now), The Backseat is a wonderfully upbeat ode to friendship and love. If you never let me go,
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Retro Review – The 59 Sound – The Gaslight Anthem – The Cranky Englishman
I will never let you down became words I lived and still live by to this day. An upbeat thrash
and crash of all those youthful, energetic emotions, the feel of finding a place to belong,
the feeling of mattering after so long – they all combine to form one of my favourite songs
on the album, and a perfect coda at the end of it all. A reminder that no matter what is
thrown at you, no matter your emotions and feelings, if you have someone you can rely on,
you can go anywhere.
The album fades out, and you have a smile on your face, and that’s what it is about this
album. It’s somehow modern and nostalgic at the same time. It’s a truly powerful, modern
guitar music influenced album, yet somehow still has the tinge of nostalgia. That probably
comes from Fallon’s lyrics and the impact on the listener, which is somehow augmented by
the rock and roll style of the music. It’s their masterpiece for me, because ultimately, it
proved not just to be a product of the band’s time, but a snapshot of mine too.
To this day, no matter where I am, what I’m doing, or how down my life is, the album brings
me to a place. Some of those places are things I never had; summer romances, night drives
with people who I love, and who love me; or some things I did have. Hope. Optimism. The
feel that life’s out in front of you. That’s what this album represents to me. and that, more
than anything, is why Gaslight Anthem’s The ’59 Sound is unabashedly one of my favourite
albums of all time. I think that’s true for almost every Gaslight Anthem devotee, and
anyone who loves this album. When it comes down to it, that’s music’s power. At it’s most
seductive and inescapable, it has the ability to transport people to places they’d never been
before, make people feel feelings they hadn’t before; but more than anything, many years
after the fact, they can put you back in the place you were then.
I was glad to put myself in this place again. Thanks for reading if you got this far.
5/5. Still one of the greatest albums of all time.
https://crankyenglishman.com/retro-review-the-59-sound-the-gaslight-anthem/
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Retro Review – The 59 Sound – The Gaslight Anthem – The Cranky Englishman
The '59 Sound
The Gaslight Anthem
1
2
3
Great Expectations
The Gaslight Anthem
The '59 Sound
The Gaslight Anthem
Old White Lincoln
The Gaslight Anthem
3:05
3:09
3:23
Got feedback/hate? Love this album too? Comment, tweet or email me.
Posted in Music Tagged 59 sound, album review, gaslight anthem, music, music review, review, rock music, the 59 sound,
the gaslight anthem
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