Songs from the Front Porch

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (130 ratings)
Songs from the Front Porch album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 40:34

Write a Review 3 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

LOVE THIS ALBUM

EddieG

didnt really know much about michael franti until i started poking around EM...this guy is terrific, i'm hooked. great rhythms, wonderful lyrics all backed by a terrific band. would love to see them live..putting that on my TO DO list.

user avatar

Just a flat-out great record

dpb23

Saw Spearhead open for Dave Matthews a few years back. Love the Stay Human record and Yell Fire, but this record is the one I repeat over and over. A great singer songwriter record (which oversimplifies that it is funky, soulful, smart, challenging) that I would put in the same category as my very favorite recordings. Every one I play this for reacts to it. And what a voice! With so many similar style and sweet soul tinged guitarists, Michael Franti is fresh air, because he can sing and he can rap and is the real deal. The last few tracks may be the best on the record!

user avatar

chillin' on the porch

fishmongerman

A perfect album for chillin' outside on a nice summer day. Or anytime for that matter.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Much different than his previous endeavors with Spearhead, Songs from the Front Porch takes Michael Franti and puts him in an acoustic setting with a stronger emphasis on songwriting/storytelling, singing, and performance. Songwriting skills that show traces of Ben Harper and Terry Callier along with a vocal delivery on par with those two are fairly obvious from the get-go. The manner in which Songs was recorded gives the record an immediate sense of intimacy, almost as if you’re on the front porch of his brownstone and he’s playing the songs directly to you for the first time. Songs retains the intelligent lyrics of his earlier efforts with Spearhead, and nowhere is this more evident than on “Oh My God,” an iron-hot discourse on the state of the union, circa 2003. At 40 minutes, there’s no unnecessary filler, and while the album has a tendency to become a bit preachy at times, it’s refreshing to see Franti’s versatility outside of the hip-hop arena. – Rob Theakston

more »