Down . . . But Not Out

It's obvious from the opening strains of Goodbye, the first track on DOWN . . . but not out, that Frank Arricale is a hopeless romantic. Just as obvious is the fact that Frank is a first-rate songwriter with a gift for transforming his hopeless romanticism into compact, melodic works of art.

Goodbye and the thematically related Goodnight, for example, are striking in the beauty of their simplicity. The eminently catchy Love in Continuous Waves is a pop gem. It would be difficult to find a more genuine, touching treatment of mature love than Autumn, and the powerful Breathtaking Love is a classic of barely-contained torment.

But on DOWN . . . but not out, Frank goes well beyond the scope of the average hopeless romantic. He turns an ironic eye on life at the office--and on modern society generally--with I'm a Machine; he skewers the world of advertising (or is it infotainment?) (or is it drug-pushing?) in Brain Candy; and he still manages to find time to deal with time (Perpetual Motion), war (Sunshine Water Air), and the mind of God (Queen of the Universe). Not bad for a guy who has to devote most of his energy to holding down the rock and trying to keep Pandora's box shut.

Throughout the album, the intimacy of the songs is enhanced by the independent-even-from-the-independents production. Performing all vocal and instrumental parts himself, Frank creates recordings that blend the feel of a demo with the precision of carefully-detailed arrangements. What results is unvarnished honesty.

In short, DOWN . . . but not out is a collection of intelligent, finely-crafted, highly personal songs, offered (in what would appear to be an ironically hopeful gesture on the part of its creator) for the appreciation of hopeless romantics, hopeful romantics, and perhaps even hopeful non-romantics everywhere.

Eat it up!
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