As part of
Capitol Records' re-emergence as an
alt rock label after years of near-neglect by
EMI in favor of the younger, hipper
Virgin imprint,
Kevin Devine's major-label debut was released nearly simultaneously with
the Decemberists'
The Crane Wife. But where that album found
Colin Meloy and crew expanding their sound into commercially dubious arenas like '70s
prog rock and
Fairport Convention-style
folk,
Put Your Ghost to Rest sounds deliberately intended to pull
Devine from the indie
folk ghetto onto AAA radio alongside the likes of
KT Tunstall and
John Mayer. Opening track
"Brooklyn Boy" is built on the same intimate, acoustic guitar and voice combo as
Devine's solo records, but producer
Rob Schnapf adds strings, piano and other elements to flesh out the sound in a manner more conducive to radio play. Undoubtedly chosen on account of his work on
Elliott Smith's
XO and
Figure 8 -- the albums
Smith made in exactly the same career circumstances as
Devine, who's an admitted disciple of the late
singer/songwriter --
Schnapf does pretty much exactly the same for
Devine as he had for
Smith. While the richer arrangements and extra production gloss are neither intrusive nor inappropriate, it's clear that
Put Your Ghost to Rest is meant as
Devine's commercial breakout. For the most part, however,
Devine sticks to what he does best: emotional lyrics set to gentle,
folk-rock influenced tunes; the main exception,
"Go Haunt Someone Else," is one of the album's bright spots, a playful bit of
neo-psychedelia similar to
Michael Penn's more overtly '60s-influenced work. Perhaps too low-key to fully grab the mainstream,
Put Your Ghost to Rest at the very least won't offend
Devine's indie audience. ~ Stewart Mason