Get Your Music on Amazon!
Get Your Music - and everything else - on Amazon! All purchases made on Amazon through this link earn a commission for Jesusfreakhideout.com!

JFH Music Review


Dustin Kensrue, Please Come Home EP
CLICK COVER TO ENLARGE

Dustin Kensrue
Please Come Home EP



Artist Info: Discography
Genre(s): Country / Indie / Rock
Album length: 8 tracks: 29 minutes, 40 seconds
Street Date: January 28, 2007


READER RATING:   


The difference between listening to Thrice's 2001 debut, Identity Crisis, and their seminal 2005 album, Vheissu, is the difference between listening to teenagers sounding like teenagers and men sounding like men. Part of this was due to the band's transformation from SoCo hardcore punk into an artful expanse of modern rock and post-hardcore; the other part was due to vocalist Dustin Kensrue's natural evolution into a sturdier, gruffer singer (an evolution that would continue for years to come). However, the first true curveball Kensrue would throw at his fans came with the release of his 2007 debut solo record, Please Come Home.

California might not seem like a logical place for someone to develop a southern drawl, but that's precisely what Kensrue convincingly displays on this short-and-sweet country record. With an old-fashioned track list of only 8 songs, some of which contain little more than acoustic guitar, Please Come Home plays out like an age-old collection of parables. The heartbreaking title track is itself an adaptation of Jesus' parable of the prodigal son from Luke 15, except adapted here to be from the father's perspective. This is a winning lyrical turn, perhaps bested only by the opening track, "I Knew You Before," a scathing critique of a culture that destroys the self-worth of women by forcing them to constantly be beautiful: "I knew you before you were beautiful, back then / You could be beautiful again."

Elsewhere, blues enter the mix on the ode-to-faith "I Believe," and the show-stopping "Blood and Wine," an unforgettable 2-minute experience of stories strung together by the over-arching theme that when a person gives into sin, the human heart's only solution is to sin more and more in a downward spiral of dissatisfaction. In spite of the song's dark themes and brief allusions to drug use, theft, and adultery, the chorus melody, "Now that I've tasted blood, this wine seems too thin," is bound to take a permanent spot in listeners' memories.

While the album as a whole is an authentic country-storyteller experience, it's not without weaker moments. The melody of "Consider the Ravens" uncomfortably resembles fellow troubadour Jack Johnson's "Banana Pancakes," and the lead single "Pistol," dedicated to Kensrue's wife, has a harmonica solo that brings the mood close to cheese.

The closing track "Blanket of Ghosts" might also call into question one's interpretation of Romans 7--(it's worth noting that Kensrue wasn't as theologically careful and astute on this album as he would later be on the 2013 worship album, The Water and the Blood)--but otherwise, the organ-drenched ballad does a beautiful job of bringing this 8-song experience to a warm and solemn close. With suitable production from Thrice guitarist Teppei Teranishi, each fine-tuned song is memorable and enjoyable, not a single track containing more harmonies or instruments than it needs. Please Come Home ultimately works on many levels: it was a great start to a solo career for Thrice fans and non-fans alike, while it also prepared the Thrice faithful for the stylistic diversity the band would divulge in with future releases.

- Review date: 11/18/15, written by Chase Tremaine of Jesusfreakhideout.com



(JFH Sponsor Spot)

Check out JFH's Lloyd in his first-ever childrens book!

 

. Record Label: Equal Vision
. Album length: 8 tracks: 29 minutes, 40 seconds
. Street Date: January 28, 2007
. Buy It: iTunes
. Buy It: Amazon Music (MP3)
. Buy It: Amazon.com

  1. I Knew You Before (3:55)
  2. Pistol (3:44)
  3. I Believe (2:45)
  4. Please Come Home (3:41)
  5. Blood & Wine (1:59)
  6. Consider The Ravens (4:15)
  7. Weary Saints (4:08)
  8. Blanket Of Ghosts (5:13)

 



Leave a Comment

 

 

go to main Album review page
go to Album review archive

 


(JFH Sponsor Spot)

 

 

                 
Check out JFH's Lloyd in his first-ever childrens book!

Search JFH



This Friday, April 25, 2025
ALBUMS
PJ Bostic Hope In The Winter Stage (independent)
Megan Danielle Grace - Single [Provident]
Disciple Skeleton Psalms (Deluxe) [Tooth & Nail]
Sam Hauge Exit 9B - EP (independent)
Smokey Robinson What The World Needs Now [Gaither]
Stephen Stanley trustfall [Capitol CMG]
UPPERROOM 1350 (Live) [Capitol CMG]

SINGLES
Ashes Remain The Let Down - Single [BEC]
Big Daddy Weave Stranger No More - Single [Curb]
bodie SAY SO - Single [Provident]
Bongo Chico Wrongside Right - Single (independent)
Dan Bremnes Cortado - Single [Curb]
Mainstream Worship CHANGED! - Single [DREAM Worship]
River Valley AGES Love The Lord Your God - Single [BEC]
Tasha Layton & The Choir Room Thank You Isn't Enough - Single [BEC]
Joel Vaughn Testify - Single [DREAM]
The Young Escape Untitled - Single [BEC]


Next Friday, May 2, 2025
ALBUMS
Free Worship Anuque no Lo Vea [BEC]
KingsPorch Songs for the Simple Gathering: Vol. 3 [BEC]
Melody Noel Back to Praise - EP (independent)
Jordan St. Cyr My Foundations (Acoustic Sessions) - EP [BEC]

SINGLES
Slow Salvation As We Decompose - Single [Velvet Blue]



For all release dates, click here!
 

Get all of JFH's indie compilation now totally free!
Check out depositphotos for royalty free images