“A Wedding in Connecticut” is one of many soulful tunes off of
Ron Pope’s 2012 album “Atlanta”. Atlanta is a very eloquent, smooth album
with rich melodies and piano angst. It’s a really pleasant listen. So I would
encourage you to check it out as a whole.
Ron Pope first came to prominence
after his internet breakout hit “A Drop in the Ocean” and after being played
last year on the CW’s "The Vampire Diaries" its profile only increased and
justifiably so. Pope’s impeccable songwriting and tender lyricism put him on
another level. There are two really great songs that stand out on this album
though, “Everything” and “A Wedding in Connecticut”.
“A Wedding in Connecticut”
sets itself apart from anything else on the album. Pope succeeds most when he
does what he does best, telling stories. In a writing style that is more
reminiscent of a country song than a piano soft rock ballad, he tells the story
of three different people. Each are going through a rough patch in their lives,
ones they are struggling to overcome and losses they are trying to reconcile.
There is something for everyone in this song.
The young woman whose dreams are
dimming in the streets of the big city, the mother-of-the-bride who is
struggling to celebrate her daughter’s wedding day while, mending her broken heart after the loss of her husband and finally a welder who loses his job and
wonders what will become of his family.
It all sounds pretty depressing and yet
this song didn’t leave me feeling that way. It was a sad subject matter that
left you feeling uplifted because each person finds the same solution to their grief,
love.
Seldom do we see any songs like this anymore and that is a shame. Billy
Joel had massive success telling the stories of people, perhaps most famously
in his song “Piano Man”. I’ve heard a lot of artists say that the stories they
tell from the first person perspective in their songs are actually that of their
friends, and acquaintances, and they personalize the narrative for their songs.
It is nice
to hear the singer in the position the listeners are in, the outside looking
in. Pope makes these people very dimensional and I’d be curious to hear who
inspired these stories in this song and how they’re doing. He makes them
tangible and that is really impressive.
20 Apr 13
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