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Dan
Israel & The Cultivators
Love Ain't a Cliche
label: Persistent Records
released: October 2002
our score: 4.0 out of 5.0
buy it: here
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The lack of
mainstream recognition and success for Dan Israel and the Cultivators
is a baffling mystery. I've been pleading his case in print consistently
for the last three years ever since I first heard the last Cultivators
album, Mama's Kitchen, which is spectacular. Although
the surrounding band personnel has changed in the interim, the
new album, Love Ain't A Cliché, holds up just
as well.
Israel has
an undeniable knack for writing catchy Americana rock with singable
hooks, and a "killing me softly with his song" type
of piercing lyrical insight. The proof is in the music, and Israel
comes through triumphantly. Just hearing the first few bars of
the opening track, "Some Time" with its straight-ahead
rhythms and soaring organ, brings to mind the sensation of cruising
down a highway in the heartland in a convertible with the top
down. There's nothing for miles and miles but empty space; nothing
but endless possibilities for escaping the barriers and limitations
of the daily grind of our existence and finding something better.
The characters
in Israel's songs face imposing barriers, both real and imagined
(sometimes "The Knot" is indeed tied inside themselves),
and these obstacles are as annoying as the sound of the alarm
clock heard at the
beginning of "Killing Time." There are always people
telling them they can't and they are wrong; giving them all kinds
of advice and pulling them in opposite directions at once. They
wind up feeling depressed, frustrated, like they don't have a
friend anywhere. But there's always an
underlying feeling of belief and hope that they can overcome these
things and find the direction that is right for them. They find
a way to shake off the gloom and realize that the fear and doubts
within them are never going to win if they don't allow them to.
Israel sings,
"Just give me some time / To set things
right." Somehow, you believe the people in these songs can
do that.
These trials
ultimately lead Israel back to friends and loved ones, because
love is not a cliché. This appreciation can be heard on
the gentle foot-tapper "Jump Through the Rings", or
"Hey Kid," in which Israel declares, "Mostly I'm
just happy you're alive." With "Wasn't Lost on Me",
he provides that deft, touching, closing song which gives the
album a definitive final statement in much the same way an artist
like Bob Dylan always has been able to do. The song is a tribute
to the people who matter most in life, a prodigal son type piece,
similar to "Tears of Joy" on Israel's 2000 solo album,
Dan Who?.
Someone with
as much talent as Dan Israel just can't be held down forever.
There have been several musicians to emerge on major labels just
within the past 18 months or so--Ryan Adams, John Mayer, and Pete
Yorn, to name a few--among whom Israel could easily find a niche.
Where is his break? It is frustrating to realize how good his
music would sound with top-notch, major league production. Even
without those advantages, his music sounds darn good.
If you don't
know who Dan Israel and the Cultivators are yet, you should. Come
on, put your feet in the water and enjoy some good old American
rock and roll. I believe sincerely that Dan Israel is someone
whose time has arrived. Discover a good thing today.
09-Jan-2003
9:25 PM

If you
liked Love Ain't a Cliche...
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| Tracklist:
1. Some Time
2. Don't Feel Like Laughing
3. Friend in This Town
4. Jump Through the Rings
5. Killing Time
6. Hey Kid
7. Feet in the Water
8. Overloaded
9. Dark Corner
10. Sandbags
11. Never-ending Circles
12. The Knot
13. Wasn't Lost On Me
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