Grace Potter & the Nocturnals: The Lion The Beast The Beat

It must be frustrating to be Grace Potter. So much talent, such a fierce band, the kind of charisma that can’t be taught, exuding sex and wallop with every turn—and yet, the superstardom she seems test-tubed for has eluded the Vermont-born songwriter who can rock as hard as anyone, yet exhale a ballad with knee-buckling vulnerability.
Whatever the missing factor is—songs? connection between the high-gloss image and blues-steeped music? a coherent format to break out of?—it remains elusive.
The Lion The Beast The Beat is flecked with the sweat of ambition, that make-it-or-break-it, too-tight grip on what needs to happen that strangles the spark in songs the rest of us might find ourselves inside. Instead, the Nocturnals serve up a lumbering cavalcade of forced metaphors (“I’ll be the record, you be my record player”) and lumbering arena rock that approaches Spinal Tap exploring the feminine mystique.
Adding to the frustration are Grammy-nominated producer/engineer Jim Scott’s sonic punch—this record sounds goooood—and Potter’s voice, which has never been more muscular or absorbed in the feelings she’s slinging. Lush, rich, with a sheen that practically gleams, the veneer’s impossibly bright and engaging.