The Beast In Its Tracks

AlbumMar 05 / 201313 songs, 43m 26s
Singer-Songwriter Indie Folk Contemporary Folk
Noteable

Years of positive reviews and the respect of his fellow musicians have lifted Josh Ritter near the top of the pile of American male singer/songwriters. His marriage to fellow respected singer/songwriter Dawn Landes in 2009 was supposed to be the cherry on top. But in less than two years the marriage fell apart, and this is the subject of Ritter\'s sixth studio album. The title of *The Beast in Its Tracks*, of course, bears a striking resemblance to Bob Dylan\'s alleged \"divorce album,\" *Blood on the Tracks*. Ritter\'s similarity to The Mountain Goats\' John Darnielle—in vocal, lyrical, and musical approach—on the album\'s first single, \"Joy to You Baby,\" is outright weird, as if Ritter has somehow taken on another singer/songwriter\'s persona. But it\'s just one diversion on an album filled with changing vibes and personalities, all recorded in a heady rush at the Great North Sound Society in Parsonsfield, Maine, with longtime producer/keyboardist Sam Kassirer. Among the highlights are a John Lennon–style echo for \"Hopeful,\" a direct to lo-fi boombox demo for \"Third Arm,\" and a tight small-band jam for the anger of \"New Lover.\" 

6.8 / 10

The Idaho singer-songwriter's last two albums were less about himself and more about America and all its weird history. The Beast in Its Tracks, however, chronicles Ritter's split from his wife in 2010, observed with a cool distance and scaled-back arrangements.

7 / 10

The Beast in its Tracks

8 / 10

Josh Ritter has seen a lot of ups and downs in life since his last album, and they've all gone into this simpler, more direct follow-up, writes <strong>Maddy Costa</strong>

7 / 10