The associations that white jeans usually evoke have nothing to do with the associations that emerge when listening to this album. White Denim (= white jeans) seems to get exponentially better with the release of every new album. The addition of a second guitarist also turns out not to have been a wrong choice. The band has been given even more space to experiment with song structures, but nothing
… sounds too invented. The instrumental explosions are reminiscent of the late sixties Grateful Dead and everything is in perfect harmony. The hooks are surprising and White Denim refuses to get boring. Besides the great musical craftsmanship D also contains gems of songs and on this album you finally hear how good singer James Petralli really is. A singer with great voice control who effortlessly brings sounds in a spectrum from Jeff Buckley to Robert Plant. D is an album that continues to surprise and listen to you wonderfully. If you put it on in the morning, you don't need coffee all day. (SI)more