Pop & Hiss

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Category: Jack Johnson

Album review: Jack Johnson's 'To the Sea'

Jack_johnson_sea_240_ Hawaiian-born troubadour Jack Johnson has elevated beachcomber soft rock to its platonic ideal. There’s not a coconut hair out of place on his new album, “To the Sea,” which is pleasingly packaged in all recycled papers. The micro-genre chill-wave has been ascribed to such bands as Texas’ Neon Indian and Chazwick Bundick’s solo project Toro Y Moi, but it sounds like something that Johnson should be conveying with his smoothie jams.

At this point in Johnson’s career, on his fifth studio album, a listener might expect some twists in the formula, but Johnson isn’t interested in risk. Time and again, his choices are predictable, but it’s comforting and hard not to like in its gently strummed affability. His music is on permanent vacation — it should be pumped into cardiac clinics across America, lowering the blood pressure of harried patients.

Johnson is at his most schmaltzy when he grasps for profundity and misses, like on the song “Pictures of People Taking Pictures,” which repeats its title, a clichéd kernel of meta-commentary, over and over again in an unimaginative attempt to scare up some awe. He’s better off working in watery paternal mode, like when he comforts a friend — “stop upsetting yourself, upsetting your thoughts” — over a wiry calypso beat and guitar work that darkens and then brightens again. It’s the most genuine sentiment on a record from a simple but ambitious man whose real-life philanthropic and environmentally sound practices aim to sooth the world, one bro or surfer girl at a time.

— Margaret Wappler

Jack Johnson
“To the Sea”
Brushfire
Two and a half stars (Out of four)


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Jack Johnson heads 'To the Sea' with free Santa Monica gig

Jack_Johnson_Getty._6_gif

The songs of low-key romantic Jack Johnson have always been beach-ready, and the Hawaii-raised singer will promote the release of his upcoming "To the Sea" with a free show at the Santa Monica Pier. Set for Monday, May 24, Johnson will take over the 3,000-capacity pier for a 75-minute set, his only show in the Los Angeles-area until October. 

The concert will also serve to raise awareness for environmental nonprofit Heal the Bay. The bulk of tickets, therefore, will be reserved for those who participate in a two-hour beach cleanup on the Saturday afternoon of May 22. Those who want to participate in the cleanup will need to pre-register with Heal the Bay, and information as to how to do so will be posted on the event's Web page at www.jackjohnsonmusic.com/santamonicapier.

Those who don't want to devote their Saturday afternoon to the beach cleanup, however, will have some other options to secure tickets. Johnson's label Brushfire will be giving away one pair of tickets per day via Twitter, and Long Beach's Fingerprint Records and Hollywood's Amoeba Music will each have 100 tickets to the free show. The tickets, according to a spokeswoman, will be given out on a first-come, first-serve basis Monday morning (May 17) to those who pre-order "To the Sea," due June 1.

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