Deadmalls and Nightfalls

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Deadmalls and Nightfalls album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 52:00

eMusic Review 0

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Amanda Petrusich

eMusic Contributor

07.20.10
Thoughtful, lilting Americana that exposes all of this country's beauty and rot
Label: Ramseur Records / Thirty Tigers

Although their scrappy country-folk — embellished with banjo, musical saw, melodica and the occasional lonesome horn — skews distinctly southern, Frontier Ruckus is very much a Michigan band. Frontman Matthew Milia is an expert reporter of place, and the suburban landscape he sketches is melancholy and wounded, riddled with broken-down shopping malls, handicapped parking spots, salad bars, black ice, salted roads and sad women. The band's latest, Deadmalls and Nightfalls, is a Hold Steady record for people more inclined to memorize Walt Whitman than slurp a tallboy, a collection of thoughtful, lilting Americana that exposes all of this country's beauty and rot.

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Whiskeytown Reborn?

slamgrass

This is a wonderful, melodic listen. I hear "Pneumonia" era Whiskeytown, which is not such a bad thing. Shine on, Matthew Milia, and expose us to the North Carolina hiding in the tall grass around Pontiac, Michigan.

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Pretty standard stuff

tfarny

I guess I'm getting really tired of this Shins-derived acoustic indie stuff. I thought this was kind of whiny and forgettable.

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gets better each time

BrunoBruno

Frontier Ruckus delivers an authentic Americana sound through sparse yet confident arrangements. That in itself merits repeated listening, but the lyrics bring a New Millennium sensibility that dovetails well to make this a thinking-person's album. In the tradition of Woody Guthrie, but very much a work of its own time and taste.

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a crossroads

hightouchmegastore

of influences and sounds, Frontier Ruckus makes its own mark. Great songs and a wonderful sonic texture with its diverse instrumentation. Excellent road music, if you're looking for that.

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Excellent followup album

JazzyBlue

I thought this was an excellent followup to Orions Songbook although I still prefer the songs on that album. Another winner.

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A masterpiece

SteveR

Frontier Ruckus is one of the best bands of our time. The songwriting is outstanding. The lyrics are superb. Deadmalls and Nightfalls is another masterpiece.

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They Say All Music Guide

It’s not hard to figure out that Frontier Ruckus are from Michigan; there are verbal clues as they drop mentions of East Lansing, White Lake, and Pontiac in the lyrics, but even without them, there’s something about the dour classicism and sad, stoic beauty of Matthew Milia’s melodies that has sprung from dozens of long nights stuck at home with a few feet of snow outside and a case of beer for company, or buggy evenings by the lake troubled by humidity and heartache. The literate angst and spare, elegant sound of 2010′s Deadmalls & Nightfalls, powered by a handful of acoustic instruments (most handled by Milia and bandmate David W. Jones) and some tactfully applied horns (courtesy of Zachary Nichols), suggests a middle ground between the Palace Brothers and Sufjan Stevens, but the effect feels more like the shared experiences of Midwestern brethren than any conscious borrowing, and Milia and his bandmates give this album a full and satisfying sound without sacrificing the open spaces that add so much to the power of this music. Frontier Ruckus’ name and approach conjure up images of a rural community, but the concerns of Deadmalls & Nightfalls are largely those of a place where the cities have fallen into disrepair and the suburbs are following their lead; the sorrow of this music speaks of a troubled time and community, but the bittersweet memories and uncomfortable present days in Milia’s songs are a shout against the wasted potential of these cities and their people rather than self-pitying navel gazing. In its own subtle way, Deadmalls & Nightfalls is a powerful portrait of the sad state of post-millennial America, and the thoughtful simplicity of Frontier Ruckus’ approach speaks as eloquently as any angry shout about life in post-industrial America. – Mark Deming

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