FRANKIE

 

Frankie Ballard

Sunshine and Whiskey- 2014 (Warner Nashville)

Reviewed by Michael Rampa

Upon first glance at the track list of Frankie Ballard’s sophomore release, “Sunshine and Whiskey” you might think you’re in for 40 minutes of upbeat party anthems. Nearly half the songs have unsubtle titles like Drinky Drink, Sober Me Up and the standard, Don’t tell Mama I Was Drinking. But behind some of the clichéd titles are deeper themes including introspection, death and regret.

It Don’t Take Much is autobiographical. Ballard had designs on making it big in the Major Leagues after enrolling at Western Michigan University at age 18 on a baseball scholarship.

“just a high school kid with  strong arm, throwin’ them rocks at an old barn

Got a full ride shot, Gonna be a star…

Now he’s got that whole town facing all the dreams that they quit chasing”

 

Despite not having touched the instrument until he was 18, the 11 tracks are sonically held together by his more than capable guitar work that ranges from delicate slide  to the full on scorching of the radio ready I’m Thinking Country

 

The album revisits two songs from his earlier recordings—his signature, “Tell Me You Get Lonely,” and “Sober Me Up. They led to his re-energized approach to writing and recording. He took a more  blue collar approach, crafting his own product from the bottom up, Producer Marshall Altman was a natural fit for the strategy.

 

 

The highlight is the ballad,  Don’t you Wanna Fall where a man invites a superior woman to descend from her pedestal and join him  “down here”

With his smoky voice, and edgy blues/rock fusion, Ballard will inevitably draw comparisons to fellow Michigan men Uncle Kracker, Kid Rock and Bob Seger. Though the album is riding on the Top 15 breakthrough hit “Helluva Life” the deeper cuts define the artist