If the term “concept album” conjures up images of keyboard players dressed as wizards and ten-minute drum solos then perhaps it is best to think of In The Hills of California as an album of interlinked ideas, an instrumental narrative or a series of scenes and scenarios told through music. Based around the idea of the album’s central character wandering the San Ynez mountains, the music is a description of their encounters with the oddballs and outsiders, misfits and madmen who make their home there.

The album takes the form of, largely, instrumental pieces, some funky and dance-infused, some more chilled and jazz inspired; it wanders the alternative side of soul and often plays with new forms of rock and indie expressions.

Crocodile feels like a strange dream-like take on jazz-rock and Typical is wonderfully funky and groovesome but it is the last three tracks which are the most compelling, a tryptic called Another Bend in The Road. Not only do these come with a beguiling, slightly out of earshot lyrical component but across its three chapters covers boundless sonic mileage from apocalyptic rock to funky disco dirges, from chiming soul breaks to warped R&B interludes.

If you think that concept albums have had their day then Clay Rodgers masterful and occasionally mind-blowing album will make you think again. 

Link to the album:
https://open.spotify.com/album/6CcMY9cEQHqYzRe1vRvf9n?si=qXO9TdeeRkutR2CBnJgmDQ

Social media links:
https://linktr.ee/ClayRodgers
https://www.instagram.com/clay_rodgers_4/

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Musician, scribbler, historian, gnostic, seeker of enlightenment, asker of the wrong questions, delver into the lost archives, fugitive from the law of averages, blogger, quantum spanner, left footed traveller, music journalist, zenarchist, freelance writer, reviewer and gemini. People have woken up to worse.

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