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Reviews - The Tao of Motor Oil:   release date: 9 August  2010



The Tao of Motor Oil (2010)

Release Date: 9 August 2010

On the Download:  Jeff Finlin's The Tao of Motor Oil

Why we like it:  To call a musician a “poet” is not always a compliment.  Poetry often dwells in the realm of pretension and pomp. Still, we expect our songwriters to be poets.  But we also want them to speak to us with an ease that resonates as common, yet also with a clear profundity that says beautifully, perfectly what we wish we could.
The Tao of Motor Oil - 2 August 2010

Jeff Finlin does just that on The Tao of Motor Oil.  His words may catch your heart off-guard, but know better:  This songwriter is a poet in the guise of an everyman.  His music may be the disguise:  As on past efforts, Finlin travels the railways and highways of the American sound, drawing from country, blues, and rock ‘n’ roll - without following well-tread paths.  His music is familiar but fresh and overflowing with soulful inspiration.

In the end, the poet prevails in the shadows.  As the title signals, this is an album about movement:  “Tao” loosely translates as “the way.”  It seems Finlin sees the release from struggle as an open highway, a fascination he shares with one of his fans, Bruce Springsteen.  But this is a freedom that no car, no highway will allow you to control, because that is not the way.  “Take your hands off the wheel. Just let go,” Finlin sings.

None of this is heavy handed.  Finlin’s characters are not always escaping unique, dramatic problems worthy of a feature film.  There is nothing special about a broken heart, really.  “You can sleep and I will drive / We’ll watch the skyline drift away / Thank God we made it out this time.”

What you will find on The Tao of Motor Oil is the complex beauty of lives we could encounter any day, filtered through the gaze of a day-to-day poet.

Bonus: Read J.R. Moehringer’s profile of Finlin from our July 2007 edition of the magazine. 

Josh Johnson
August 9 2010   
5280 magazine


Album review: Jeff Finlin, The Tao Of Motor Oil

****
Bent Wheel Records 613285885424, only through www.smartchoicemusic.com

Truly a one-man Americana music industry, Finlin writes, produces, engineers, plays and sings everything on his new album, another collection of gritty, tender blue-collar stories.

Jeff takes a simple phrase such as Hands Off The Wheel and teases it out into a regretful lament, while La Luna starts off as a superior road song and takes a delightful spiritual twist.

Bruce Springsteen is a major Finlin fan, and his low-drama narratives should make you one too.

Download this: Barefoot In The Snow, Only Human (A Dream Of Consciousness)

Colin Somerville
Scotland on Sunday
August 22 2010
Scotland on Sunday

The Tao of Jeff Finlin

It seems like yesterday Colorado was a musical wasteland and today it's loaded!  Where have I been?  It took Ash Ganley to bring Jeff Finlin to my attention and I'm happy to pass along the favor. You know those boneheads in the dorms who are always grabbing on to the fringe music you discover a couple of years later?  Here's some of it.  Grab now and avoid the rush.  This guy is a songwriting monster (and he can sing, too)!   And he gets his tao from a can.  Uh, if they have cans for motor oil these days.  Ladies and Gentlemen, The Tao of Motor Oil... Read all about it, then follow the links and listen.

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An old friend of mine used to say that if you wanted to know about music, you had to talk to a musician.  That very thing popped into my head one afternoon as Lyons, Colorado's
Ash Ganley and I were trading emails bemoaning the present state of the music industry - i.e., how hard it is to even get your music heard, let alone bought.  While I used Ganley as an example, he used Jeff Finlin, a musician I'd not heard of until then.  Finlin, it turns out, bases himself out of Fort Collins, Colorado, cranks out poetic singer/songwriter fare of exceptional quality (or so said Ganley) and is a star awaiting discovery.  I confess to rolling my eyes a little, having followed many a suggestion toward less-than-star-but-good-quality musicians, but Ganley was so persistent I knew I could not disregard his comments.

Upon hearing Finlin's latest album, The Tao of Motor Oil, my eyes stopped rolling.  Finlin is everything Ganley said and more.  I won't say you heard it here first because everybody and his brother is already saying it and if you haven't heard it, you (like myself) haven't been paying attention, evidently.  God knows it is hard enough to find all but the media darlings (just try to evade mentions of Lady Gaga and every other flavor of the moment - it ain't possible - while searching for the unknown but deserving), but a simple search turned up major publications and writers saying the praiseworthy things about Finlin usually reserved for can't-miss musicians.  Even Uncut's Nigel Williamson, a critic I go out of my way to read, wrote this:

Last seen in the UK supporting Steve Earle, Finlin is an all-American original whose singing recalls John Hiatt, Dylan, and even Dr. John.  But his songwriting has its own unique character and seems to become more honed and concentrated with every album.”

Williamson nails the singing part, though I hear a slight Leon Russell rather than Dr. John edge (potaytoes, potahtoes, eh?), and I cannot attest to earlier albums, having heard only this one.  But allow me to say, “What he said.”  Protest a comparison, however slight, to Hiatt, Dylan and Dr. John?  Not me!  I hear it.  More than that, I feel it.  You will, too, if you give it half a chance.

What Finlin has are the somethings you can't put into words but have been the fabric of artists such as Dylan, Townes Van Zandt, John Prine and others, all too few and all a step above.  There is a sound or combination of words and song or something which defies a true description, though you can point to moments.  Like when Finlin sings this verse from Hands Off the Wheel:  “Well, she cried like Utah in the flash flood spring/I could still smell the summer on her freckled skin.”  The way Finlin sings it, I doubt I will ever see a freckled girl again without the smell of summer in my head.  Or this from La Luna:  “You can sleep and I will drive/We'll watch the skyline drift away/Thank God we made it out this time/Ain't much sacred left there these days/All we stake and all we choose/Ain't nothing in the light here on the bay/Of La Luna/Shining like God's own little blade/La Luna/Breathing in the mortal's empty face.”  Not doing it for you?  Well, these words were not meant to be read, they were meant to be sung, and when Finlin sings them they come alive.  A test.  Try to imagine reading the lyrics to Dylan's All Along the Watchtower before having heard it.  Try hard.  Now tell me the lyrics are the same without the music. Well, maybe you could tell me, but you certainly couldn't convince me.   Is Jeff Finlin Bob Dylan or Townes Van Zandt?  No.  But he composes and performs on the same plane.

So what am I doing writing about someone who is getting press all over the place?  Me, a person who is practically allergic to the popular and the mainstream?  It's simple . I'm assuming that some of you, like myself, are victims of this cosmic joke which conceals the best in spite of our attempts to find it.  I'm doing you a favor.  I'm telling you that The Tao of Motor Oil is among the best.  And this time, I'm hardly the only one who thinks it.

Frank O. Gutch Jr
Rock and Reprise
October 2010

Rock and Reprise net

Minimalist thoughts from Americana singer-songwriter

****
Americana man Jeff Finlin has, over the course of half a dozen albums, acquired a reputation of being a less is more writer par excellence, a lover of somewhat opaque imagery and a maker of music that requires commitment to listen to rather than something you put on while vacuuming.

2002’s SOMEWHERE SOUTH OF WONDER is his definitive work and while his latest doesn’t quite capture those heights it’s not far short. Tao loosely translates as ‘the way’ and the ten songs here are all about journeys of one sort of another – some obviously like Hands Off The Wheel and My Maybeline, some like Barefoot In the Snow less so. Finlin is in search of freedom, of change, but he’s comfortable being on the journey and if he never quite gets there in the end, well the trip will have been worth it.

Finlin has done everything on the album himself and his washes of soft guitar and delicate picking soundtrack his quavery, slightly cracked voice as it sings songs with layers of meaning, songs that make you think. Everything here is good but he saves the best until last. Only Human (a dream of consciousness) is an epic trip (the word is used advisedly) through a slightly out of focus landscape that moves between personal recollection and Dylan-esque lines about the world in general. It’s essence of Finlin and even if the listener doesn’t quite understand all of it it grips them softly but irresistibly. It leaves you feeling sated, thoughtful and ready to reach for the repeat button, and you can’t ask for much more than that.

JS

JS
Maverick
December 2010
Maverick Magazine


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