Album Review: Ball Park Music – Every Night The Same Dream (2016 LP)

Ball Park Music have wooed audiences across the nation with their genre-defying versatility and clever lyrics, cementing themselves as a stalwart of the Australian alternative music scene. Their fourth studio album, Every Night The Same Dream, following on from Puddinghead, demonstrates a mature, moodier direction and does not disappoint.

The shamelessly fun first track “Feelings”, is preceded by an ambient-noise intro, progressing to an emotionally honest song – surprising when you consider the amount of cowbell they’ve managed to sneak in (needs more cowbell?). The following tracks progress with rhythmic keys and guitars, a driving force behind their cynical lyrics – it’s smart, it’s damn good music; it’s the Ball Park Music that we all know and love.

The fourth track, “Pariah”, is a moody, seven-minute aural journey, where keyboardist Paul Furness gets a chance to take some of the lead. The entire mid section of this track was a live jam session, taken in one recording. It’s dripping in authenticity, highlights the talents of all of the members, and diverges from their norm. There’s something inherently intimate about hearing a jam, like the band is letting you into their creative processes; secretive nuances between the band and their instruments.

A brazenly nihilist song with optimistically soaring vocals and riffs has been missing from my life, and the fifth track fills the void. “Nihilist Party Anthem” is a smooth follow on from “Pariah” and has to be the self-wallowing-dance-around-the-living-room-pretending-I’m-Morrissey pick of the album.

This is an album that ought to be listened to on vinyl, and here it becomes evident – there’s a real feel that the record has been flipped, and you’re about to discover the treasures of the B side. The un-preppy track “Peppy” marks this second side, with its synth-soaked soundscape, and cruisy lyrics. You’ve got to hand it to these guys, they know how to write a song and be effortlessly cool. The slowed vibes continue across a few tracks, and tendril into the acoustic intro of “Don’t Look At Me Like That”, which then breaks into a real indie-rock sing-a-long of a track, and a fantastically unexpected synth-driven ending. The final tracks are crooning, ambling tracks with riffs that are bluesy and heartfelt.

Every Night The Same Dream isn’t a recurring nightmare, nor is it a dreamless sleep. It’s an unpredictable, heartfelt LP, where you’ll fall between progressive psych-rock jams, indie rock and pop ballads, succumbing to the reverie of what might just be Ball Park Music’s best album yet.

Review Score: 8.2 out of 10.

Every Night The Same Dream is out now.

———-

This content has recently been ported from its original home on The AU Review: Music and may have formatting errors – images may not be showing up, or duplicated, and galleries may not be working. We are slowly fixing these issue. If you spot any major malfunctions making it impossible to read the content, however, please let us know at editor AT theaureview.com.