On and On
SEARCH IN  
Click here to buy posters
In Association with Amazon.com
 
ORDER CD
 BUY THE CD
  
 
  
ORDER THIS POSTER
BUY THE POSTER  
 
My study of mellow summer music (which began with my review of Jason Mraz’s Waiting For My Rocket to Come) continues with Jack Johnson’s On and On. Like Mraz’s music, Johnson’s music is mostly relaxed and guitar-based. But Johnson is less goofy and more soft and poetic—with vocals that are dreamy and sometimes almost whisper-like.

On and On is an album that’s best enjoyed on the beach (preferably on a tropical island, but any beach will do) with a tropical drink in hand (come to think of it, it’s making me crave a strawberry daiquiri). You can picture Johnson wearing baggy cut-offs and strumming his guitar while lounging in a beach chair, shaded by a palm tree. The beats are relaxed and tropical—but Johnson is a lot more smooth and subtle than someone like Jimmy Buffett. Songs like “Wasting Time” and “Cupid” are quietly seductive. Others tell stories. Still others, like “Gone” and “Cookie Jar,” make powerful points—about materialism or about accepting responsibility for the problems in the world. In that way, Johnson fits right in with his brothers in tropical-music-with-a-message (think Bob Marley, only not quite as bold and defiant).

Still, if you don’t listen too closely (or read the lyrics, like I always do), you won’t really notice the serious stuff. You’ll just sit back and enjoy a cool, easy-going album that’s great for a lazy day on the beach. And while you’re at it, flag down the waiter and order me a daiquiri.

Submissions Contributors Advertise About Us Contact Us Disclaimer Privacy Links Awards Request Review Contributor Login
© Copyright 2002 - 2024 NightsAndWeekends.com. All rights reserved.