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Traveling (98 Pounder)
In further modesty, Poltz's latest release, Traveling, hardly presents itself as a work of long incubation, although it's just his third album in ten years. Not unlike Todd Snider, Poltz is a songwriter who figures just about anything that crosses his frame of perception will make a fit subject, regardless of import or triviality. Thanks to this -- and also to a voice that combines a little bit of Gordon Gano, a little bit of Alex Chilton, and a lot of miles -- most of Traveling goes by with the pleasantness of a spring day that bends the mouth into a persistent smile. Tracks such as "I Think She Likes Me" and "Serve Me My Food" are novelty numbers sustained by steady roots-rock music. When Poltz turns introspective, his eye for the odd but telling detail helps smooth over the jarring mood shift. In the rambling "Brief History Of My Life", a fondness for baseball radio makes the voice of Vin Scully palpable, and his brisk just-the-facts lyrics on "Street Fighter's Face" match the way his narrator, an Iraq-war veteran, would speak. If Poltz doesn't mean to be taken seriously, he does at least mean to take care with his craft. -- JON M. GILBERTSON |