eMusic Review 0
Divorce hurts. You can hear it cracking Shannon McArdle's voice as she sings, “It's time we rode in a separate car, stayed in our own place” during “Stepping on My Heels,” on 30 Year Low. Whether or not it's what she intends, McArdle is announcing the dissolution of both the romantic and artistic partnership between her and Mendoza Line guitarist Timothy Bracy.
Many songwriters have recorded “divorce albums” — Dylan's Blood on the Tracks and Bruce Springsteen's Tunnel of Love are two famous examples — but it's one thing to write about your heartbreak, and another to do so while staring into the eyes of the person who caused it. Only Richard and Linda Thompson (the quintessential Shoot Out the Lights) have ventured into the brave and emotionally naked territory that Bracy and McArdle explore.
Musically, 30 Year Low is a brief whirlwind of an album. Its eight tracks blitz through languid country shuffles, dreamy piano-fueled reveries and rousing beer-raising anthems. The instrumentation is tight and solid: guitars, lap steel, pounding drums. What ties the songs together is regret. It seeps through both Bracy and McArdle's voices, giving them a weary tone. Even songs that are ostensibly about political issues, such as… read more »