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Sunrise Over Sea by
The John Butler Trio!
Critic's Review
John D. Luerssen, All Music Guide
The John Butler Trio's U.S. debut album, Sunrise Over Sea, is phenomenal -- from the opening notes of "Treat Yo Mama," a muscular and soulfully expressive roots rocker, to the final strains of the expansive, ten-minute-long opus "Sometimes." The John Butler Trio is arguably the best musical group Australia has to offer in 2005, and Butler's superb, bluesy riffs and innovative melodies are only part of the JBT musical equation. The sturdy rhythm section of Shannon Birchall (on bass) and Michael Barker (on drums) gives added life to hit contenders like the powerful "Company Sin" and the buoyant, breezy "Better Man." If the mid-album blues vignette "Damned to Hell" seems an ill fit at first, its lo-fi, banjo-strummed presentation shifts effortlessly into the warm, heartfelt "Hello." On occasion, as with the uplifting acoustic number "Peaches & Cream," Butler's voice recalls the Red Hot Chili Peppers' Anthony Kiedis, but Butler and his bandmembers are without question on their own trip. And one only needs to hear the magical love song "Seeing Angels" to feel the trio's transcendental power.
Critic Blurbs
"The personality of Butler shines through his music with a nasty twang on the acoustic guitar, and like the Dave Matthews Band, his trio has a winning combination of aching, soulful vocals to win over the preteen girls, and pensive, moving instrumentation and near-jamming to win over the college-aged males gathered around the keg."
Mar 31, 2005
"Although hard to understand at times, JBT has a good message with fun lyrics that are as fresh as they are entertaining."
- Mindy Rawls | Mar 23, 2005
"Sunrise Over the Sea is soulful and moving, particularly in its more concise moments like "Zebra" and "Betterman."
Mar 15, 2005
"Anyone who doesn't enjoy country, blues or folk will be surprised and then gladly seduced by the Australian threesome's acoustic cross-pollination of these genres, because the group's home-distilled sound also embraces pop's upbeat and accessible nature."
Mar 14, 2005