GREAT BIG SEA "The Hard and the Easy" Zoe

Friday, April 28, 2006; Page WE06

GREAT BIG SEA"The Hard and the Easy"Zoe


THE GREAT Big Sea's sailor shanty style reflects the group's Newfoundland home so jovially that an album made solely of local and traditional tunes is a logical choice. Many of the tracks on "The Hard and the Easy," which also contains a bonus DVD, sound perfect for a drunken singalong: "The Mermaid" bemoans the anatomical limitations of dating a sea creature, while "Cod Liver Oil" blends rowdiness and jealousy with a dramatic, swaying rhythm. "Captain Kidd" captures a pirate's rebellious spirit, and the traditional "Come and I Will Sing You (The Twelve Apostles)" is a counting song that evokes both "The 12 Days of Christmas" and "99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall."

The group does break from its rambunctious sound for a few mellower songs, to varied success. The sweet, loving lyrics of "Graceful & Charming (Sweet Forget Me Not)" seem incongruous to the rest of the album, but "Harbour Lecou" balances a restrained melody with a whimsically ironic tale of an adulterer who feels regret only in being caught.


Sing along: Great Big Sea's latest,
Sing along: Great Big Sea's latest, "The Hard and the Easy," is boisterous. (By Andrew Macnaughtan)

The group's charisma culminates on "Concerning Charlie Horse," a galloping sendoff to a horse that has drowned in a frozen pond, originally written by Icelandic Canadian Omar Blondahl. The song is so catchy and bouncy that it's easy to envision the group belting out the boisterous chorus, with glasses lifted in jolly-good-fellow tribute: "Here's to Charlie horse and I wants ye all to know/Charlie's gone to the big corral where all good horses go."

-- Catherine P. Lewis

Appearing Friday at Lisner Auditorium.


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