The Hopeful and the Unafraid

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The Hopeful and the Unafraid album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 39:12

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Great Music...Obvious Influence

toetod

Like Jason's "Tonight", if you're familiar with "the Wild the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle" or "Greetings From Asbury Park NJ", you will recognize the "early Springsteen" influence herein, which of course means there's also shades of the stuff that influenced early Springsteen, like the British Invasion and Dylan. But in the same way early Springsteen was an original take on Van Morrison et al, this all stands on its own. July 4, 2004 being a great example of a rambling idiosyncratic song held together by a catchy chorus. Good songs abound, and "Watch Your Step" strays from the 70's vibe into a mid-80's pop structure. Overall very good, well written and performed, actually what I hear most is Dan Bern - type lyrics with a more legit rock and roll band arrangement/execution.

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Talented Artist / Great Music

Jimmy3Sticks

All songs are worth a download, but favorites are 2,5,8 and 9. Tonight is also a great album.

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Fantastic record

C.Lowrance

Six months after I downloaded this record, I still listen to it several times per week, sometimes several times a day. My vote for THE album everyone should've been listening to in '08.

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Amazing, but not his best

mnewmeye

Amazing album from an amazing artist, but take my advice and give a listen to "Tonight" first- it's the album that captures the pure energy, passion, and emotion of Jason- and he wants to share. With all of Jason's work you'll find yourself obsessed with a song or two for a few days and then another one will jump out and say something. Seriously, give this fellow a try.

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Jason Anderson is Awesome

gkbaltimore

The week I downloaded this album, I couldn't even get past the first track-- El Paso-- I just kept playing it over and over-- determined to learn every word so I could scream them full blast while driving down the road. I was so hooked and I KNEW I had to see J.A. live; so, cleared my weekend plans and drove up to NYC for a small, intimate show at the Cake Shop. Jason did not disappoint-- talk about an amazing performer; he engaged the audience, and really rocked it out. if you get the chance-- see him live; till then-- download everything you can get your hands on... especially El Paso!!! Definitely Top 3 of all time from him!

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The Wolf Colonel guy

gbv23

This guy did the excellent "band" Wolf Colonel back in the 90's and this is a mature work of excellent songs. I heard he was in Omaha for bit and there is a hint of Bright Eyes but its hopeful and world-weary all at once. There's a GBV-Pollard influence but its more heart-on-sleeve melodic. These songs will hit right away and grow in their depth for you.

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They Say All Music Guide

The Hopeful and the Unafraid is Jason Anderson’s third solo album since the dissolution of his indie pop act Wolf Colonel. The previous New England and The Wreath found Anderson reverting to the Elliott Smith-style singer/songwriter vibe of his earliest days, but The Hopeful and the Unafraid is something entirely different. Kicking off with the nearly eight-minute epic “El Paso,” this album is aimed unapologetically at the new Bruce Springsteen vibe that sounds like what the Arcade Fire, Marah, and the Hold Steady have been flirting with, but in a far more overt way. They’re mostly forgotten now, but in the wake of Springsteen’s breakthrough success with 1975′s Born to Run, a whole school of blue-collar singer/songwriters emerged, mostly from the industrial northeast, who were aiming for a similar blend of Bob Dylan and Roy Orbison: play The Hopeful and the Unafraid back to back with any late-’70s album by the likes of Robert Ellis Orrall, Steve Forbert, John Cougar Mellencamp, Southside Johnny & the Asbury Jukes or Elliott Murphy, and this defiantly retro collection of pop/rock tunes won’t sound a bit out of place. From the honking saxophone that powers the bouncy title track, through the grandiose piano runs coloring “July 4, 2004,” “The Half of It,” and “Colonial Homes,” and from the powerhouse FM-radio swagger of “Watch Your Step” to the teenage desperation of the novelistic, detail-stuffed “The Post Office,” Anderson has written an entire album’s worth of shameless, unabashed Bruce Springsteen homages/rip-offs. If nothing else, it’s a moderately fascinating exercise in Rutles-ization, and there’s no doubt that much of the album rocks quite hard in a refreshingly non-ironic way. It’s hard not to hope that this is just a one-off experiment, because making a career as a Springsteen manqué didn’t work for most of the guys listed above, either. – Stewart Mason

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