BRIAN BYRNE –Â Tuesdays, Thursdays, and if it Rains… (2006 Kindling Music)
Strangely, I first heard Brian Byrne’s solo single debut, “Far From Good”, on a local lite-rock radio station that I usually try to avoid.  The song caught my ear for its upbeat, country-rock sound, with bouncy violin and piano on top.  A neat mix.  When they said it was by Brian Byrne, I stopped myself.  Couldn’t be the I Mother Earth singer getting played on a lite-rock station, could it?  But it was.  I promptly ordered the CD from the Record Store at which I formerly worked.  The disc arrived in a few days, great condition, except for the promo-cut jewel case.  They normally should have replaced the case before the CD shipped, but somebody missed it.  I didn’t want to ask for a new case, because I just left the place six months before and I didn’t want to become “that” customer!
But enough about me, what about Byrne? Â Here he worked with near-legendary Canadian producer Tim Thorney, as well as former Killer Dwarfs guitarist Gerry Finn. Â (Byrne and Finn both hail from Newfoundland.) Â I Mother Earth were deactivated, and Byrne honed Tuesdays, Thursdays and if it Rains… into a pleasing acoustic rock album, very “singer-songwriter” in sound.
“Far From Good” is the highlight, being the most immediate and lively. Â The album is diverse. Â The opening track “Days Go On” has elements of country, funk, classic rock and soul. Â The juicy organ parts really suck you in. Â “Jen’s Song” is one of many ballads, this one reminding me of 80’s Phil Collins for some reason. Â Byrne gets to let his voice speak more than he does in the louder I Mother Earth. Â Then there’s a big chorus on “Sweet Love”, a better light country rock tune than Bon Jovi’s ever written. Â This is like country-Jovi, but with integrity and feelings, and not a lot of flash. Â “Nova Dashboard” is a lovely, bluesy country ballad along the lines of Blue Rodeo’s dusky favourites. Â The guitars (by Thorney) get right under your skin.
I could go on and on, but all the songs have a quiet, smouldering power to them. Â The light and shade of the album sounds quintessentially Canadian to me, and the calibre of the musicianship is above reproach. Â Expect an album of diverse music crossing several genres, but do not expect I Mother Earth. Â Byrne almost went as far in another direction as you could imagine. Â And that is really cool, because he does it so well.
3.5/5 stars

