Changing Horses

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (266 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 35:39

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Amanda Petrusich

eMusic Contributor

02.02.09
Ben Kweller puts on his Gram Parsons nudie-suit and gets his Sweetheart of the Rodeo on
Label: ATO Records

The Republic of Texas has long prided itself on its all-American autonomy: Texans have their own way of barbecuing beef, a unique sense of perspective (bigger is always best), and a rich country-music legacy, ruled by outlaws and rebels. Ben Kweller may be a Brooklyn resident now, but he spent a good chunk of his boyhood in Texas. For Changing Horses, his fourth solo LP, he not only returned to Texas to record, he also embraced his home state's cowboy twang.

Kweller's best known for his goofy, plaintively-sung pop songs; in 2003, when he teamed up with Ben Folds and Ben Lee for the Bens, it felt like he had finally seized his predestined slot in the indie-pop canon. Changing Horses is a marked adjustment for Kweller, but it's not wholly unprecedented (you can hear hints of Kweller's country-leanings on "Family Tree," from 2002's Sha Sha), nor does it feel like a put-on — Kweller's always had an undeniable knack for melody, and he's an effortless and unfussy singer, with a voice well-suited to country music's soft yawns and swells. Tracks like the swinging "Fight" — with its pedal steel, guitar curlicues, piano solos and vocal harmonies — recalls… read more »

Write a Review20 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Solid front to back

thelastleaf

This album doesn't have the same vibe as his other stuff, but I think that Ben nails the country sound. I like all his other albums, and I really like this one too. Plus, the track "On Her Own" is great because it sounds like a mashup of early Garth Brooks and the theme from "Lavern & Shirley". That idea probably sounds like a train wreck, but it's actually great.

user avatar

Great Album

Goodtime

If your a fan of Sweetheart of the Rodeo, Gram Parsons or even the Kinks 'Muswell Hillbillies', then this album is for you. It really seemed like Ben was having fun recording this and the end result was a great alt-country album.

user avatar

Disappointed.

Ragamuffin74

I was a huge fan of Ben's last album (self-titled), and waited anxiously for the new one. If you're looking for typical Kweller poppy melodic hooks (that he does so well), this may not be the album for you. Changing Horses is honky-tonk country music, circa 1970s. Good songwriting? Sure. But the twang runs thick on this album.

user avatar

Trying to like it

Cat-NYC-77

I can't get into it as much as I try.

user avatar

Great change of pace!

StinaB612

This one's a bit more country, so I wasn't sure if I liked it as much as other Ben Kweller albums at first. But after a few listens I really got into it. The great lyrics & the catchy tunes still stand out and make this a must-have.

user avatar

Was so dissapointed

dancelikedavid

Considering that his 2006 self titled album is one of my favorites, this album was a huge letdown. WAY too country for my taste. Everything about his other albums that captured me was completely missing on this one. Could only stand listening to it a few times before I gave up trying to like it. Hate to give it a bad review. Honestly :(

user avatar

Basically Boring

MonsterDad

Sorry, Ben, but this is like a.m. country rock. I tried to like this album, because I love Ben, but it sounded like he was just going through the motions.

user avatar

It works!

dmtunes

You can't avoid the Gram comparisons but, Ben crafts what appears to be the real deal. The writing and performances are rock solid. Old Hat is a gem and both me and my 5 year old love dancing to Fight.

user avatar

A musician of integrity

BeBopman21

I like Ben, I don't love him. But I admire the integrity he has maintained through each of his albums. This is a very good one.

user avatar

If Gram were alive today, he might sound like this

Grimey

Some albums grow on you. Others you love right away. I loved this from the first listen. "Old Hat" is simply a beautiful song.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Media Guide

After flirting with country music throughout his solo career, Ben Kweller embraces his Texas roots with Changing Horses, an earthy record filled with pedal steel guitars and honky tonk storytelling. Kweller’s southern pedigree has always made itself known — in the twang of his acoustic guitar, in the lilt of his voice — but Changing Horses shines a spotlight on those nuances, replacing the heartland rock & roll of his past albums with a healthy dose of Americana. This is saloon-styled songwriting, complete with flashes of close harmony and images of Greyhound stations, starry skies, and homebound highways. Kweller sounds confident throughout, playing the rustic raconteur like a twentysomething Leon Russell, but the album’s secret weapon is newcomer Kitt Kitterman, whose pedal steel riffs and Dobro arpeggios lend some authenticity to Kweller’s southern state of mind. Nowhere is that mentality clearer than in the barroom gospel of “Fight,” a three-minute credo of carpe diem ethics and multi-part harmonies. Meanwhile, “Sawdust Man” strikes a balance between bouncing Beatles-styled pop and loose, half-drunk folk-rock, while “Things I Like to Do” spins a simple love song narrative with relaxed wit. For those perennial fans who always wished Kweller had turned songs like “Lizzy” into swampy Nashville ballads, Changing Horses marks a defining moment in the songwriter’s career, offering up a batch of pastiche-free country music that, like Ryan Adams’ Jacksonville City Nights, may be a promising sign of what’s to come. – Andrew Leahey

more »