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Glossary: For What I Don't Become

Glossary: For What I Don't Become

Some local bands build a buzz and a following until they get a crack at going national. Other local bands, like Murfreesboro, TN's Glossary, keep at it year after year because something needs to be expressed, even if no more than a few thousand people ever hear it. Those bands are the rock equivalent of regional filmmakers, turning out low-budget, heartfelt stories that zero in on lifestyles and locations that the mainstream media overlooks.

Three years after knocking out the restless Southern-rock epic How We Handle Our Midnights, Glossary has scraped together enough money to make For What I Don't Become, with the help of Centro-Matic studio whiz Matt Pence. Like the previous album, the new one is full of loud, anthemic songs sparked with plenty of twang and chug. It's also another album about people who work hard and don't seem to get anywhere. For What I Don't Become's centerpiece song is "Days Go By," a sprawling, scorching twang-rocker that makes the title phrase more haunting by adding the words "even when we don't want 'em to."

For What I Don't Become weighs its rootsy kick against a strong note of loneliness on songs like "Headstones And Dead Leaves" and the molten ballad "The Reckless," but the dominant tone of the album is set by the opening song "Shaking Like A Flame," which rumbles like a locomotive even as Kneiser sings about how it feels to rust. This may be one of the most exultant albums ever made about failure.

 
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