There's a scene in Murray Lerner's film ("Festival"),
about the 1963 Newport Music Festival, where Peter, Paul and Mary
are shown obliging a resounding call for an encore with the protest
song, "If I Had A Hammer." Peter and Paul face each other
from the sides and Mary faces the audience of tens of thousands,
shaking her blonde hair and bearing down on a song about making
change. She would, they would hammer out danger and a warning all
over the land. Delta Spirit have five hammers and they swing them
the way Mary bobbled her head back in '63 for her close-ups, the
way Mary sang as if her knees were on fire and her mouth was brimming
with more ire laced with optimism than she knew what to do with.
These Californians have more in common with the dirty haired, dirty
fingernailed folk groups of the nascent years than they do any of
their contemporaries. They're suited for reminiscent hopefulness
and the gracefully youthful fusion of hostility and all-encompassing
passion for all things that can set a smile ablaze or turn the hairs
on arms and backs of necks into little beds of nails at the flick
of a switch. They make lists of things they like, including all
of the people they love, their home, pretty girls, desserts, bodies
of water, justice and America. They believe there's still hope for
it and in all of the rooms contained within the hallways of the
band's newest offering, "Ode To Sunshine," they make you
understand that, when it's all boiled down, what we all ultimately
live for is catharsis and a fulfillment of body meeting land, air
and sea harmoniously. They're about bodies meeting bodies, pressing
skins to skins. They're about reminding you to listen more than
you talk. They're about urging you to put stock in the happiness
of others, not just your own. They make it obvious that we have
to go somewhere to be somewhere. We have to feel something to really
live. They sing of the soul searchers. They sing for the soul searchers.
They are the soul searchers. – Sean Moeller