USA TODAY US Edition

Train is ‘California’ bound

- >>Download: Drive By, Bruises (featuring Ashley Monroe)

Train, California 37

ROCK

“Here’s to those who didn’t think Train could ever roll again,” frontman Pat Monahan sings on the title track of his group’s sixth album. “You were the fuel that I used when inspiratio­n hit a dead end.” In context, the declaratio­n sounds confident, not arrogant, coming from a band that many had written off before 2009’s Hey, Soul Sister revived its career. “Truth is, it was attitude/ Replaced greed with gratitude,” Monahan sings later in the song.

At its best, California 37’ s emphatic bursts of melody are buoyant and life-affirming, as on the current single Drive By or the bouncy mandolin number Sing Together. When the Pistol Annies’ Ashley Monroe joins the group for Bruises, two high school acquaintan­ces bond over the wounds life has handed them. After all, “bruises make for better conversati­on.”

It’s also gimmicky at times. Given the chance to drop a pop-culture reference into a song, Monahan will do it, and album opener This’ll Be My Year comes off like a choppier version of Billy Joel’s We Didn’t

Start the Fire. It does, however, contain one of the album’s great lines: “I stopped believing, although Journey told me, ‘Don’t.’ ” The singsong You Can Finally Meet My Mom recites a litany of dead celebritie­s as a way to set up its bitterswee­t hook. Like that slightly bizarre song, California 37 isn’t without its awkward moments, but it clearly has its heart in the right place. — Brian Mansfield

 ?? Scott Underwood, Pat Monahan and Jimmy Stafford by Pamela Littky ??
Scott Underwood, Pat Monahan and Jimmy Stafford by Pamela Littky

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States