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Tomorrow Is Alright

Tomorrow Is Alright in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $24.99
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The
Sonny
in
Sonny & the Sunsets
is
Sonny Smith
, and
Tomorrow Is Alright
represents a small portion of what he's been up to since he started playing music. He broke in as a blues pianist, released a bunch of solo albums in the 2000s, and -- most impressively -- in 2009 he conceived and completed a project called 100 Records, which involved making up fictional bands and singers from all different eras and styles and then writing and recording songs for each of them.
The Sunsets
were involved in that project too, but first they recorded
in various locales around San Francisco during 2007 and 2008. It's not surprising that
Smith
would be able to undertake a project like 100 Records, as
Tomorrow
shows he's a songwriter willing and ready to try different things with a very high success-to-failure ratio. Whether it's the ramshackle three-chord pop of
"Too Young to Burn"
that opens the record, the sparse
Jonathan Richman
-influenced shaggy dog tale
"Planet of Women,"
the murky pop-psych of
"Death Cream,"
the nearly seven-minute country-rock (well, if
the Velvet Underground
were a country-rock band) jam
"Lovin' on an Older Gal,"
or the rollicking campfire doo wop folk of
"Chapters,"
isn't content to stick to one style. The one constant on the record is the loose and easy backing of
the Sunsets
(who include
Kelley Stoltz
on drums), the casual production values, and
's persona. His offhand vocals, off-kilter lyrics, and general good-natured approach help make
an unassuming, low-key gem -- the kind of record that sounds good when you need some pleasant background music to get you through a tough day, but also something you can really connect with if you listen beyond the surface. If you aren't already familiar with
, this is a fine place to start your investigation. ~ Tim Sendra
Sonny
in
Sonny & the Sunsets
is
Sonny Smith
, and
Tomorrow Is Alright
represents a small portion of what he's been up to since he started playing music. He broke in as a blues pianist, released a bunch of solo albums in the 2000s, and -- most impressively -- in 2009 he conceived and completed a project called 100 Records, which involved making up fictional bands and singers from all different eras and styles and then writing and recording songs for each of them.
The Sunsets
were involved in that project too, but first they recorded
in various locales around San Francisco during 2007 and 2008. It's not surprising that
Smith
would be able to undertake a project like 100 Records, as
Tomorrow
shows he's a songwriter willing and ready to try different things with a very high success-to-failure ratio. Whether it's the ramshackle three-chord pop of
"Too Young to Burn"
that opens the record, the sparse
Jonathan Richman
-influenced shaggy dog tale
"Planet of Women,"
the murky pop-psych of
"Death Cream,"
the nearly seven-minute country-rock (well, if
the Velvet Underground
were a country-rock band) jam
"Lovin' on an Older Gal,"
or the rollicking campfire doo wop folk of
"Chapters,"
isn't content to stick to one style. The one constant on the record is the loose and easy backing of
the Sunsets
(who include
Kelley Stoltz
on drums), the casual production values, and
's persona. His offhand vocals, off-kilter lyrics, and general good-natured approach help make
an unassuming, low-key gem -- the kind of record that sounds good when you need some pleasant background music to get you through a tough day, but also something you can really connect with if you listen beyond the surface. If you aren't already familiar with
, this is a fine place to start your investigation. ~ Tim Sendra