On their second full-length, Two Gallants weave urgent back-alley storytelling with no-frills instrumentation that alternately boils with visceral fervor and mourns with plaintive restraint. The youthful duo play a strain ... more »of rock that falls somewhere between folk, punk, and old-time blues and the resulting sound is much more than the sum of its parts. Two Gallants draw on Old West images and themes of revenge, redemption, and shifty morality to create wide-swinging moods trafficking in brash ferocity, repentant regret, and freewheelin' Americana. The double LP version includes two bonus tracks from the band's early recordings.« less
On their second full-length, Two Gallants weave urgent back-alley storytelling with no-frills instrumentation that alternately boils with visceral fervor and mourns with plaintive restraint. The youthful duo play a strain of rock that falls somewhere between folk, punk, and old-time blues and the resulting sound is much more than the sum of its parts. Two Gallants draw on Old West images and themes of revenge, redemption, and shifty morality to create wide-swinging moods trafficking in brash ferocity, repentant regret, and freewheelin' Americana. The double LP version includes two bonus tracks from the band's early recordings.
CD Reviews
Early 2006 Highlight
Garett Press | Westchester, NY | 04/15/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"*absolutepunk.net*
Whether or not you're a card-carrying member of the Saddle Creek fan club, you have to concede their knack for putting out records that stand apart from every Tuesday's heap of jewel cased, 12-song, compact discs. The latest grassroots indie exhibitionists to join the glorified Saddle ranks are Adam Stephens and Tyson Vogel of Two Gallants, wielding only their guitars, their drums, a harmonica, and well... their throats.
With the basic elements intact, the Gallants perambulate a spectrum of punk-country that could only spawn from the mating of a harmonica and Stephens' harsh rasping (you can practically hear the poor guy's throat tearing up). Sometimes gushing with sweet and other times burning sour, Two Gallants attempt the Decemberean task of telling old-time tales but with a half cup less romance and a quart more grit. In the place of The Decemberists' quixotic swashbucklers we find the type of desperate, weathered figures who report from a run-down prison, resent their lazy white slave-master, or make statements like "You might have seen me 'neath the pool hall lights/Well baby I go back each night/If you got a throat I got a knife/Steady rollin', I keep goin'."
When band becomes bard we know to expect long-winded and often lengthy tracks. This is no exception, with three songs spanning the 9 minute mark, and those in between at least edging 5. However, there are only nine songs in sum, keeping the record just under one hour. "Las Cruces Jail" welcomes you into this jagged little world where you can virtually envision the tumbleweeds rollin' by and feel the rattlesnakes slithering past your ankles. Offering a sampler of both sugar and spice, track one offers a good approximation of where this record attempts to take you. The bouncing verses sound akin to older folk in the realm of Johnny Cash, and when they slow down - well... you choose the alt-country comparison. On those aforementioned long-runners a single picking pattern dominates most of the song, which is soothing and easy on the ears but runs the risk of redundancy at some point or another. However, those songs do a good job of augmenting in weight and potency as they play out, eventually reaching an electifying paramount ... so if you've got the time, it should be more of a listening pleasure than a chore. Plus, production is in a word: ideal... a perfect merge of raw and polish.
Other publications have come down pretty hard on the lyrics, which contain allusions and direct dialogue concerning racial prejudice and such. While the need for the "n" word in any rock song is certainly questionable, Two Gallants ramble through the record pretty elegantly and there is a rather clear notion of where historical foundation ends and mere storytelling begins. It's simply an attempt to paint a picture of another time and place and For Whom the Toll Tells succeeds in doing just that. Perhaps not a showstopper - yet - Two Gallants are an early alternative highlight for the year, and hey... how many other punk/country duos can you name?
-AbsolutePunk.net"
Excellent Follow-up Album
Enjoying great music | Kentucky | 03/12/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"If you have the first Two Gallants cd, this is an obvious buy. If not, you can pick up The Throes or this and not go wrong either way. Great mix of folk and indie rock. If you still like MTV then this music is probably out of your league, but for people that have developed their music taste and are looking for something new, pick this up, you won't regret it."
This Album Is An Instant Classic
Brian Smith | 04/18/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Without sounding too cliche, or too much like a band trying too hard Two Gallants have created an album and sound quite their own. This album I can not stop listening too. The lyrics are intense, the vocals unreal, and the music so well done it seems as if they are musical geniuses. Do yourself a favor and buy this album now. This has to be one of the most original and intense albums I have ever heard. And I am a huge music snob. I'll say it again - buy this album..."
It's O.K. I'll say it. This album is delicious.
chris bell | Bunn, NC USA | 04/04/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Wow dude. What an awesome release. I don't even know where to begin. My buddy Ryan was all like,"dude, check out this band they're called Two Gallants." And I'm all thinking he said Two Gallons so of course I'm all stupid going all over the internet not findin peanuts. But anyway yeah this is great. They've obviously got quite a variety of influences so they please a pretty diverse crowd. A personal favorite of mine is Waves of Grain. That song gets me so chill. Yeah, so pick it up. Great CD."
Usually I don't bother with the review thing...
Jon Doctor | chicago, il | 07/02/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Where to start? Gritty and rough for sure. Sounds like it could be the soundtrack for a Steinbeck novel the story telling in the songs is that vivid. I too was a little suprised at the use of the "N" word but who uses it and how it is used is much much more important (not that this is the difinitive forum for such a topic).
More than anything the tight/sloppy playing speaks to me and pretty much defines the vast majority of the music I listen to (Eno, Big Star, Mats, etc). If you took Mark Arm from Mudhoney and put him in front of No Depression Uncle Tupelo then you would have Two Gallants.
As for the 4 star rating lets be realistic everyone thinks the cd's they buy are five stars or they wouldn't buy them and 5 stars is overused on amazon anyway. This is a fine effort and certainly worth owning but it falls into the "nice to have" vs "essential" category."