The first thing heard upon listening to The Gaslight Anthem’s fourth album is confidence. Handwritten is the album of a band that has settled comfortably with their own sound, the changes being taken by the band found in the tone of the album. Brian Fallon has written an intensely personal record, one that contains examples of the band at their best.
There is a heft to this album that was sincerely lacking from the previous effort from the band “American Slang”, felt both lyrically and in the sound. Producer Benden O’Brien has definitely lent some of his metal experience over to the band. The albums sound is heavier, and it’s a change that fits extremely well. In moving away from the pop sensibilities of their previous effort, “Handwritten” manages to keep safe the classic rock sensibilities that garnered the band a following in the first place whilst also expanding their capabilities.
There’s a remarkable job of levelling the slower tracks with the punk, the album only truly drawing breath at the end, with “Mae” and “National Anthem”. Even then, it feels natural. “Mae” is a sweet little track musing on unrequited love, saved from cliché by its own simplicity. “National Anthem” compares sets the singers relationship to America to an affair that has lost its chemistry and joy. It’s gaudy, but it works, slowing the pace down to a light acoustic strum. One almost wishes the album ended with kind of apolomb it carried in its earlier tracks, but why complain about a good song?
This is a damn good album, and if you want some pure, fast rock it’s going to be hard to find better. The Gaslight Anthem are constantly playing to their influences strengths, and it would be interesting to see what would happen when they try and step out from that shadow. But if this is the quality that the band is going to produce for the rest of their career whilst under it, I think I’ll definitely live.
By David Lamb
9/10

