| With Born Sandy Devotional, the Triffids fully realized the potential 
        shown on their earlier releases, Treeless Plain and Raining Pleasure. 
        By 1985 the band was based in London, but despite the fact that this album 
        was recorded 9,000 miles from home, its roots lie deep in the Triffids' 
        native western Australia. While the spectacular cover photograph featuring 
        the township of Mandurah provides a sense of place, David McComb's songwriting 
        evokes his home environment all the more vividly. Indeed, this is the 
        most accomplished work from McComb's tragically short career, encapsulating 
        his talent for creating a lyrical and musical resonance between the stark, 
        isolated geography of western Australia and universally recognizable, 
        desolate interior landscapes. Born Sandy Devotional certainly is dark, 
        its lyrics replete with death, psychological turmoil, and despair, but 
        it's never maudlin or banal. McComb's commanding delivery combines with 
        expansive, string-adorned arrangements to elevate many of these songs 
        to the level of high emotional drama; haunting keyboards, vibes, and "Evil" 
        Graham Lee's pedal steel add atmospheric detail. The elusive quality of 
        McComb's writing makes his stories all the more compelling and memorable 
        as he offers listeners fragmented, unresolved scenes instead of comfortable, 
        complete narratives. Such elements coalesce sublimely on "Stolen 
        Property" and "The Seabirds," songs of loss and suicide, 
        respectively, but the anthemic "Wide Open Road" and the intense, 
        claustrophobic "Lonely Stretch" are the standouts. Another tale 
        of life gone wrong, "Tarrilup Bridge" sets organist Jill Birt's 
        childlike vocals amid an eerie ambience of vibes and strings. Nevertheless, 
        the album closes on a cautiously optimistic note with Birt's duet with 
        McComb, "Tender Is the Night." Born Sandy Devotional was a landmark 
        release for the Triffids. More than that, it stands as a testament to 
        McComb's status as one of Australia's most gifted (and overlooked) rock 
        songwriters.  (by Wilson Neate, All 
        Music Guide) |