After over a decade of Internet-only and mail-order albums, singer/songwriter
Colin Vearncombe returns as
Black, the name he used all those years ago. It was 1987 when tracks like "Wonderful Life" and "Sweetest Smile" entranced folks who would have been huge
Steely Dan fans if they were living in the '70s. It was smooth stuff that relied quite a bit on the keyboard, but on
Between Two Churches,
Black is a guitar-driven project with
Vearncombe sounding rather like an early-'70s
Neil Diamond, boldly delivering lovelorn strummers like "Same Mistake Twice" and epic soul-searchers like "Two Churches." Way back when there was absolutely no indication
Black would ever attempt bluesy rave-ups such as "Cold Chicken Skin" or squeeze out the gutsy "Teenage Wall" as if he was
Richard Thompson or
Chris Smither.
Vearncombe hasn't lost his rich voice or his ability to write meaningful tunes, and he's gained a heck of a lot of warm charm, something that shines on the very dreamy and sorta
Everly Brothers "In a Heartbeat." The highlights are numerous and the album is paced perfectly, sinking in as a full experience rather than a haphazard collection of tracks right about the second listen. Mature, smart, and honest,
Between Two Churches is a wonderful surprise.
–
David Jeffries, Rovi