CD Review: Melissa Mulligan, Love This Life

This is an upbeat pop-rock CD from Connecticut singer-songwriter Melissa Mulligan. The best songs, especially "Dark Horse" and "Janie," could be radio hits, and Mulligan's maple-syrup voice reminds one of the sometimes underrated Paula Cole's.

"Borrowed Wings" is another catchy number, with airier, Sarah McLachlan-ish vocals. "Girl," a dramatic rocker on the Pretenders tip, segues nicely into the eerie "You Are The Light" which features guitars and harmonies that echo Jefferson Airplane.

The lovely title track is the heart of the album. Though not the catchiest song, it embodies the way Mulligan's protagonists rise out of melancholy into energetic hope:

Dust on the dresser, 'cause beauty is tired,

Settles and covers up what lies beneath

It's dangerous, how the fear builds up...

I'm sad as a river that's washing up empty

Nothing inside me just this need to run

Give me time... To love this life.

The production isn't amazing, but not bad for an indie project. The musicians are skilled and energetic, with tastefully minimalist guitar leads from Bill Blue, especially in "You Are The Light" and "Love This Life."

The lyrics can be awkward and disjointed, as if Mulligan is trying to cram too many twists of thought into too few lines. Confusing syntax and mixed metaphors result, although now and then those end up as evocative poetry: "Headache negotiates blood from the brain/Is it dry, is it drowning, does it pound concrete?" I'm not sure what that means, but there's something great about it. In any case, the best of the melodies are so catchy it doesn't matter. Melissa Mulligan has the touch. In her best songs and best vocal performances, she makes pop-rock magic.

Available at CD Baby

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Co-Executive Editor of Blogcritics and lead editor of the Culture section. As a writer he contributes most often to Culture, where he reviews NYC theater; he also covers interesting music releases and writes a semi-regular review round-up of independent albums. …

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