Strays Don't Sleep

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (18 ratings)
Strays Don't Sleep album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 41:13

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Rust

BrendanAdkins

There's a particular state of nostalgia and ache you can induce in yourself just by putting "Cars and History" on a loop and listening to it over and over again. I'm not saying I recommend doing so. But not a lot of songs are that single-minded in function, or that good at it.

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mmm.....OK.

DFA1977

I was drawn to this project by the song 'For Blue Skies' -which still stands out as the best track on the album - however, it's one of two highlights on the record. I'll keep spinning this fella but it's a little underwhelming in it's low moments and the subtleties of what's good about this album stay buried in the background. The project is a great idea to showcase Matthew Ryan's voice/songwriting skills - funnily enough, I always found his previous work a little lackluster - at least this shows potential to get really interesting as opposed to his other ventures. Suggested download(s): "For Blue Skies" + "April's Smiling At Me"

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Questionable Stage Image But Good Tunes

HainZ

From the pre gig poster, these guys looked like a slightly worrying form of prog - rock swede metal band, if there is such a thing, but their support slot for Josh Rouse was far better than the poster and I'm really pleased to be able to download these tunes as most were of a good standard when played live.

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Videos Not Available

ruadork

From what I've read, this comes as a CD/DVD package in stores; films were made to accompany the songs. Maybe someday I'll get them, but for now, I'm happy to be able to download this. Matthew Ryan has been one of my favorites, so I was happy to see this side-project of his.

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They Say All Music Guide

A truly awful, non-descriptive band name hides a small gem of an album that springs from an unexpected collaboration. Neilson Hubbard has released several solo albums’ worth of twangy power pop in the tradition of Nick Lowe, while Matthew Ryan is more often compared to grizzled vets like Tom Waits and Lucinda Williams. The press kit for their first duo album as Strays Don’t Sleep claims that the pair first bonded over a mutual love of artsy Scottish indie outfit the Blue Nile, and indeed, opening track “Love Don’t Owe You Anything” takes a page from the spacious arrangements of the Blue Nile’s A Walk Across the Rooftops. (Latter-day Scots Belle & Sebastian are another good touchstone for the album as a whole.) Ryan’s rough croak of a voice meshes uneasily with Hubbard’s choirboy tenor, giving the album a refreshing sense of friction that’s subtly amplified by the pair’s decision to sing each other’s lyrics rather than their own. As a result, Ryan doesn’t fall into familiar blues-rock vocal melodies and Hubbard sounds almost entirely different than he does on his solo records. The arrangements are equally unusual for both: in keeping with the U.K. indie brief, the previously all-American songwriters build the tunes with delicate layers of keyboards, drum machines, and effects-laden guitars that rarely play recognizable riffs. There are certainly fans of both artists who won’t care for the singer/songwriters’ new direction here, but fans of Ivy, Camera Obscura, or the ’80s U.K. indie bands who inspired them will find much to appreciate. – Stewart Mason

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