eMusic Review
If "no one dies on a Handsome Family album" isn't quite as newsworthy as "man walks on the moon," it still comes as a surprise. The body count — owing to murder, suicide or simply vengeful Mother Nature — on the Albuquerque duo's previous studio albums was pretty perilous, but on Honey Moon, Brett and Rennie Sparks, the married couple who write music and lyrics, respectively, celebrate the romance of romance, not of death.
Not that the Handsome Family has switched all that much otherwise. Brett's still singing in a bendy, dolorous baritone, though he's swooping around a lot more than usual, particularly on "The Loneliness of Magnets," which has a vocal melody that winds so preposterously that the song's chorus ("I feel the loneliness of magnets /And the tides across the sea") sounds like an audition to voice a villain in a Popeye cartoon. The spooky country arrangements are as ingratiating as ever, particularly the dry pedal steel that twists around "Little Sparrows" and the soft doo-wop piano triplets and guitar that sounds like Marc Ribot covering Angelo Badalamenti on "Linger, Let Me Linger."
And then there are the words. You can spot a Rennie Sparks lyric across the room: "You… read more »