On their self-titled debut album, Fancy Gapâthe duo of singer/songwriter Stuart McLamb (The Love Language) and songwriter/producer Charles Crossinghamâtakes listeners on a journey that steers through lifeâs melodies with windows down. Itâs a country-tinged, radio-ready sound, yet delves deep into universal themes. From stirring reflections on death and aging to the joyous celebrations of life, love, and triumph, every track on Fancy Gap captures different facets of the human experience. With a twang evoking the heartland and a widescreen perspective hinting at something greater, McLamb and Crossingham explore poignant moments of laughter and loss, enduring bonds of friendship, and the ups and downs of relationships. McLamb has always been a heart-on-his-sleeve songwriterâone thatâs also a traveler, tourer, hand-holder, relationship whisperer, and chronicler of beginnings and endingsâand the bittersweetness that courses through The Love Languageâs four albums is a voyage worth all the heartbreak...
read more
On their self-titled debut album, Fancy Gapâthe duo of singer/songwriter Stuart McLamb (The Love Language) and songwriter/producer Charles Crossinghamâtakes listeners on a journey that steers through lifeâs melodies with windows down. Itâs a country-tinged, radio-ready sound, yet delves deep into universal themes. From stirring reflections on death and aging to the joyous celebrations of life, love, and triumph, every track on Fancy Gap captures different facets of the human experience. With a twang evoking the heartland and a widescreen perspective hinting at something greater, McLamb and Crossingham explore poignant moments of laughter and loss, enduring bonds of friendship, and the ups and downs of relationships. McLamb has always been a heart-on-his-sleeve songwriterâone thatâs also a traveler, tourer, hand-holder, relationship whisperer, and chronicler of beginnings and endingsâand the bittersweetness that courses through The Love Languageâs four albums is a voyage worth all the heartbreak. As he began working on the bandâs fifth album in early 2020, McLamb took some early demos to Crossingham, whom he had known for nearly a decade but became closer with after moving back to Raleigh, North Carolina, that March. The pandemic struck in the midst of feeling out those early ideas; the two sheltered in Crossinghamâs mountain cabin in Fancy Gap, Virginia, and questions of what life would look like when the world started over seeped into their late-night songwriting sessions. What began as a producer/artist collaboration blossomed into a close-knit co-writing project, rooted in Crossinghamâs inspired belief and admiration in McLambâs talents, and the musical kinship that the two had forged.As the tracks were fleshed out, a collective idea of song and place became entwined in how the two wanted these compositions to sound and feel. âCharles and I wanted to make an album that sounded like the music we wanted to hear. It just so happens that at the time we were listening to a lot of classic '90s radio rock and a lot of classic country radio 98.1 WBRF out of Galax, VA,â McLamb explains. Fancy Gap was born. âOver the next two years,â he adds. "We hustled through odd jobs to keep our heads above water while dedicating ourselves to crafting the best songs we could.â The music took shape during recording sessions at the cabin, as well as impromptu jam sessions where Crossingham played guitar and McLamb handled drums and vocals. "The lockdown had us feeling cooped up, so we just let loose and rocked out. Making music with a friend like that was a blastâit took me back to the early days of jamming in my parents' garage with my younger brother," McLamb recalls fondly. They would then refine their best ideas at the Fancy Gap cabin, utilizing a portable rack unit of Quad Eight preamps. "Many of the lead vocals were captured in the moment, often on the first or second take," he says. Reaching out to fellow artists and musicians became a priority as their excitement around the music continued to grow, and also felt like the thread to sew together the fabric of life after lockdown. âDuring the pandemic, weâand a lot of our artist friends who were strugglingâneeded a belief that there would be a light at the end of this,â Crossingham explained. âAs the songs began to come together, we wanted to open our tent, and ask some of those friends and artists we respected to be a part of Fancy Gap with us.â As such, the album features masterful contributions from Sharon Van Etten (vocals on âStrawberry Moonâ); Taking Back Sundayâs Adam Lazzara (vocals on âFilthy Habitsâ); Rami Jaffee (The Foo Fighters, The Wallflowers) on the Hammond B3 organ and Wurlitzer; acclaimed session guitarist Will McFarlane (Bonnie Raitt, The Mountain Goats, Etta James); and Jon Graboff on pedal steel ( Willie Nelson, Noel Gallagher, M. Ward, Norah Jones). Fancy Gap was finalized over five sessions with Grammy-award-winning engineer Craig Alvin (âAlbum of the Yearâ Kacey Musgravesâ Golden Hour), who mixed the album at Noble Steed Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. As McLambâs timeless voice leads the wayâall classic pop timbre and heart swells, casting notes toward the skyâthe songs explore love found (âLittle Heart Racerâ) and love lost (âDiamond Cutterâ), the passing of loved ones (âMagnoliasâ), and hazy dreams and addictions of all kinds (âOld Waysâ). The album pulses with a front porch phrasing and tempos that echoes the mountain locale of its recording; âHow to Danceâ and âLittle Heart Racerâ swing with a breezy roadhouse exuberance countered by the sweet melancholy of âStrawberry Moon.â Throughout, Fancy Gap also finds McLamb and Crossingham conjuring the pop leanings of early Counting Crows and The Lemonheads (âFilthy Habitsâ), the chordal phrasing and harmonies of Joni Mitchell and Crosby, Stills & Nash (âWhispering Windsâ), the stadium-sized sing-along choruses of The Wallflowers (â40,000 Milesâ), and the expansive western terrains akin to a more psychedelic Marty Robbins (âDiamond Cutterâ). Fancy Gap, for all the genuine emotional resonance it hits lyrically, feels like a hands-in-the-breeze springtime ride at dusk, with a treasure trove of your favorite albums under your seat and nothing in front of you but gravel roads and wistful speed. Itâs a musical expedition that transcends the sum of its parts, painting sonic landscapes that linger in the heart and soul. â Roy Bourne, April 2024
show less