Rhett Miller

AlbumJan 01 / 200912 songs, 42m 6s
Singer-Songwriter
Noteable

Whether Rhett Miller is recording under his own name or with his band the Old 97’s, he’s still the same authoritative voice of measured reason within the confines of romance. He leans towards straightforward pop as a solo act, leaving behind his band’s penchant for the country breeze. “I Need To Know Where I Stand” is a no-nonsense piece of classic pop that would’ve easily purred out of an AM radio back in the early ‘70s. Artistically, he slots in comfortably alongside his elders — Marshall Crenshaw comes to mind — writing subtly melodic treasures with lyrics that suggest he’s paying attention to what growing older in a world of eternal youth can do to a man. “Happy Birthday Don’t Die” has a loose, jokey vibe running under its stream-of-consciousness, and an extended jam just for kicks. “Bonfire” is the 4 AM ballad. “Another Girlfriend,” “Haphazardly” and “If It’s Not Love” tell us Miller isn’t likely to be an expert on how to succeed in relationships anytime soon. But for a songwriter it’s the struggle that makes it worth it.

5.9 / 10

Old 97's leader returns with another solo album that leans more toward sophisticated pop rather than his band's country tinged sound.

C

The gap between the material Rhett Miller contributes to Old 97’s and what he saves for his solo albums isn’t really all that wide. Miller tends to favor quick tempos, jangly guitars, and melodies that float wistfully through the verses before landing hard on the chorus. But without his regular bandmates, Miller does…

Rhett Miller is an extraordinarily talented slacker.

9 / 10