Have you ever heard about the blind men and the elephant? Six blind men are near an elephant when a wise man asked them to describe what it looked like by what they felt. One felt a leg and described the elephant as a pillar. One felt the tail and described the elephant like a rope. On and on. Each described the elephant based on their own personal experience - and all of them were right.
What do six blind people have to do with Handful of Luvin's album Life in Between? Sometimes I feel that describing music is the same way... And this album is tough to describe. Each track has a slightly different "feel" that feeds into the eclectic mix of this rock quartet. But if you take each track on its own, you only hear part of the truth.

The band began to form in 2002 when David John (vocals and guitar) met Andrew Joslyn (fiddler) at Western Washington University in Bellingham, Washington. As they began to play, their styles complemented each other perfectly. Over the next couple of years, Patrick Files (bass guitar) and Michael Knight (drums) joined the mix to form Handful of Luvin. Often compared to the Dave Matthews' Band, I hear many more influences in there - from a bit of Tom Petty, to some punk ska like Simply Stoopid, to even a bit of the Vitamin String Quartet and a touch of Poe. It's a strange beast that at once seems unique and yet comfortably similar.
From the very first track, I was swept up in the river of amazing arrangements and poetic lyrics that evoke not only emotion, but engage the intellect and imagination.
"Born Lucky" starts with the plucking of strings and shifts into rock mode with lyrics that might make you wonder if these guys are philosophers. "The more we criticize, the less we realize / that we're the ones in control of all our lives..." Among the guitars and the poignant turns of phrase is a rock sensibility asking us to question ourselves when things get tough.







Article comments