Ian Flanigan
The Man My Mama Raised
(Reviver Records)

Country music is such a minefield these days. Itโ€™s so easy to stray, either into falsely earnest Americana or the muddy cliches of modern Nashvilleโ€”none of which need to be reiterated here. With his latest disc, The Man My Mama Raised, gruff-toned Saugerties โ€œThe Voiceโ€ singer Ian Flanigan certainly dabbles with each, but overall, he succeeds in a walking a considered line between the two. Flaniganโ€™s album is well-produced (by John Stone), with a clearly commercial bent, but itโ€™s facile to curse it like thatโ€™s a bad thing. Suffice to say, it sounds great and radio ready. โ€œRather Be Country,โ€ for example, does start with the unmistakable sound of a pickup truck engine, swiftly redeemed by sawing fiddle and riffing electric guitar; and just as swiftly spins back off the road by lyrics that lean heavily bro. Yet the song cooks, and the line โ€œSometimes you gotta get a little dirt on your angel wingsโ€ soars.

The title track follows, its power-ballad ambitions leavened with traces of mandolin and its lyric locating a decidedly tender vision of nostalgic country motherhood. And, man, does Flanigan show off his baritone pipes. Lenesha Randolph partners with the star-in-waiting on a cover of the 1984 Tina Turner hit โ€œWhatโ€™s Love Got to Do with It,โ€ adding a welcome contrasting color while Flanigan expands his sonic palette. Would that more of the record danced with the pedal steel-inflected neo-bluegrass tones of the gently lusty โ€œEvergreen,โ€ which well frames Flaniganโ€™s rasp.

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