Steve Baskin - I Sometimes Think (Better) (2026)

  • 07 Mar, 08:27
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Artist:
Title: I Sometimes Think (Better)
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Independent
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll, Power Pop, Singer-Songwriter
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 37:50
Total Size: 88 / 261 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. How I Feel (2:31)
2. Where You Are (3:41)
3. I Don't Know Nothing (Love Song) (3:32)
4. Trip Begin (4:01)
5. Beside You (4:25)
6. Better (4:34)
7. A Hard Days Night (3:24)
8. Lucy (2:43)
9. Bad Idea (4:09)
10. I Sometimes Think (5:00)

Somewhat of a pop singer-songwriter in the tradition of Andrew Gold (“Lonely Boy”), this showcase is primarily mainstream fodder at the onset, with some commercially very strong & viable tunes. The arrangements have endurance. Baskin doesn’t sugarcoat his stuff & he has weight in some tunes (“Trip Begin”) that will remind listeners of the rockier Kenny Loggins (“Somebody Knows” “I’m Alright”).

If Steve Baskin (vocals/acoustic & electric guitars/mandolin) follows that fiery route (keep reading), he could be quite an attraction. After all, the giants like Billy Joel, Elton John & Bruce Springsteen are… aging. 10 songs exude their individuality nicely on I Sometimes Think (Better).

Songs like “How I Feel” have an instant commercial intrinsic appeal. It sounds like something you’ve heard before & liked. And still do. The recordings are pristine & produced by Steve with Rich Herring in Georgia studios.

Song #2 has more punch: “Where You Are” is a tightly arranged piece played with vigor. Yes, it has a sweet commercial appeal to it, but that’s how you score a chart hit. The playing is excellent. Steve doesn’t have a particularly distinctive voice (like Billy Joel or Elton John), but he does know what he’s doing. He applies finesse & his skill surfaces even better on the more serious & well-structured “I Don’t Know Nothing (Love Song).” This leaves a lingering flavor in the ear. Nice mandolin & Steve’s finest vocal…so far.

There are some wonderfully blistering guitar leads & swirling piano notes on some tunes. But with each successive song, Steve gets more resurrected. It helps to raise the somewhat no-frills songs to a higher level. Steve isn’t Shane McGowan, John Lennon, or Dylan, but he doesn’t fail. He works harder.

“Better” has muscle both as a composition & with Steve’s determined vocal, even soulful. The arrangement is out of the old English music hall cum Beatle-band Stackridge songbook. It’s typical of their approach (“The Volunteer,” “Happy In the Lord”). However, a slow Beatles classic, “A Hard Day’s Night,” is riding the median. Sung & played well; the song drags. It was never meant to be a cocktail lounge tune.

Steve comes back swinging with a Kenny Loggins-type sparkler, “Lucy.” But…“Bad Idea” & “I Sometimes Think” both sound like Steve Baskin being Steve Baskin & no one else. This is his launching pad. Start with the last two songs. These are reinforcing tunes for R&R. Right here.





  • whiskers
  •  16:14
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