The album opens with “I Can’t
Live Without You,” which features some good, laid-back, enjoyable 1970s-type
vibes. And their sweet vocals add to the positive, pleasing sound. “I won’t walk away/’Til I hear you say/I’m
sorry/We’re one and the same/You don’t have to treat us this way/Let’s bend all
the rules/So nobody will lose.” Daniel Ledwell joins them on this song,
which was released as the first single from the album. It’s followed by “Before
The Fall,” which starts off with a somewhat grittier, more serious sound. It
opens with the line, “I lost it all
somehow,” which feels almost like the end of a story. But then the second
line is in response to it: “Well, what
are you going to do now?” Perfect, right? It’s suddenly looked at as a
possible beginning rather than ending. There is both a sense of loss and a
sense of possibilities. This is an excellent song, using both male and female
lead vocals. Its lyrics mention dreams, as does the next song, “Any Other Way,”
an energetic tune. “If I lay awake in bed
with dreams full of dread/Would you wipe away my fears?” This song has a
lot of memorable lines, such as “Would
you remember my face/If you could no longer see/If I was alone and lost in the
woods/Would you come find me.”
“Lead Me Lover” features some of
the most beautiful blending of voices of the album, all over a steady,
prominent beat. It’s interesting, as the beat keeps us grounded, but these
vocals lift us up. “Lead me, lover/To
somewhere you’ve never been/With any other lover.” Oh, yes. I feel like
this song itself can lead us into new territory, of tender wonder. Then “Another
Morning” begins with the line “Get up,
get up, get up now,” something I basically have to tell myself every
morning. This track has a gentle folk sound. “Open eyes/September skies/I kissed you back in June.” Something
about this song really moves me, and it is more effective each time I listen to
it. It is followed by “You Don’t Love Me,” which begins with just vocals and
guitar, and builds from there, to include drums and then backing vocals and
eventually even saxophone. That’s Ian Sherwood on saxophone, and his presence
comes as a delightful and perfect surprise. This track is yet another
highlight, and I love the work on percussion. I’m also taken with the way that
Geraldine approaches the lyrics, the way she delivers lines like “I’ve tested you enough to see/You’d stoop to
bended knee/To prove to you first, then to me/That you love me.”
“We are dying from the moment we are born” is the first line of “Foreign
Shore,” a song that features Daniel Ledwell again joining the trio on several
instruments. This one has a bit of a 1970s vibe, and has some wonderful lines,
like “Moving forward, but always looking
back/Seeking all that we are, and all that we lack.” This question of the
movement of time and living within memory is also addressed in “We Look Back,” where
they sing “We look back/On all of the
chances we had.” Riff Jelly plays bass clarinet on both “Foreign Shore” and
“We Look Back.” The album then concludes with “Some Lies,” a song written by
Tim Baker. It has a pretty, comforting sound, with beautiful vocals. Jenn Grant
and Daniel Ledwell provide backing vocals on this track. I don’t mind admitting
that this one had me in tears. “I feel
you lean against me/In the fire’s heat, in the fire’s heat/You are with me
now/I can feel you here somehow/Love, you’re always with me.”
CD Track List
- I Can’t Live Without You
- Before The Fall
- Any Other Way
- Lead Me Lover
- Another Morning
- You Don’t Love Me
- Foreign Shore
- We Look Back
- Some Lies
Time Enough was released on May 11, 2018.
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